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SELECTING AN EXECUTIVE RECRUITER
As the labor shortage continues to tighten
its grip on industry, the competition for talent continues to rise. Many employers are
searching for innovative recruitment solutions by hiring in-house, corporate recruiters or
venturing into Internet recruiting, while others turn to third-party recruiters commonly
called executive recruiters.
Executive recruiters
are usually hired to assist in the identification and selection of hard-to-fill, or
critical talent needs. However several employers are now looking favorably at outsourcing
the majority of their key recruiting needs to executive recruiters.
a. What are the
benefits of utilizing executive recruiters?
Executive recruiters
are specialized professionals. They work at the recruitment process exclusively, and
survive on their ability to get results in a highly competitive marketplace. Most
executive recruiters bring years of experience to their work, and are intimately familiar
with every aspect of candidate identification, sourcing and selection.
Executive recruiters
are hired to cast a wider net and approach accomplished candidates who are busy working
and not looking. Many candidates are invisible from where employers sit, and will not
approach a public job opportunity without the safety and confidentiality of third-part
representation.
Executive recruiters
have the advantage of meeting with candidates outside the interviewing arena where they
can build trust and rapport in a neutral and protected environment. They have mastered the
delicate art of persuading well-paid, well-treated executives to give up good corporate
homes for better ones.
Executive recruiters
remove a tremendous recruitment burden from management by presenting a limited number of
qualified candidates who are usually prepared to accept an offer. They also are skilled at
dealing with counter-offers, and managing candidates until they are safely on board with
their new position.
- Committed to confidentiality
Executive recruiters
understand the privileged relationships they have and are committed to strict
confidentiality -- both by professional ethics and common sense.
Many employers want
to keep hiring decisions and initiatives confidential from competitors, customers,
employees, stockholders or suppliers to protect against unnecessary apprehension.
Management resignations are often private matters and require immediate replacements
before the resignation becomes public knowledge. Sometimes employees need to be replaced
without their knowledge. For these assignments, an executive recruiter is usually the only
confidential solution.
Candidates also need
the confidentiality which executive recruiters can provide. Many candidates are willing to
hear of outstanding opportunities, which could advance their careers, but few are willing
to explore those opportunities on their own in fear of jeopardizing their current
position. An executive recruiter is a third-party representative that knows how to gain
the confidence of nervous candidates.
- Objective professional counsel
The objectivity and
feedback from an executive recruiter is invaluable to an employers. Recruiters know how to
advise and counsel management so that the best hire gets made -- the choice with the
longest-range likelihood of mutual benefit and satisfaction. They can help employers
evaluate their expectations, and bring industry expertise to assist with the development
of job descriptions, reporting relationships and compensation programs. They can also
usually provide investigative reports on candidates, third party referencing, personality
testing, foreign language proficiency assessment, relocation assistance and other
specialized services.
Executive recruiters
help balance the emotional reactions and biases of corporate management. Likewise, the
recruiter can act as a skilled intermediary -- a diplomat, if you will - to clear up
misunderstandings, straighten out miscommunications, and tactfully convey each party's
concerns to the other during negotiations.
- Cost effective investment
The use of executive
recruiters should be viewed as an investment in improving the quality of an organization's
managerial might. The right choice can dramatically increase a employer's value; and that
value rises exponentially moving up the management chain. The fees associated with any
particular search become almost incidental considering the ultimate payback.
A good way to view
cost is to measure the cost of a bad hire. When an incompetent new employee makes bad
decisions, hundreds of thousands -- even millions -- of dollars may be lost. This employee
will have to be replaced and the overall downtime for having the position unproductive can
be staggering. Employers often engage executive recruiters to ensure that such trauma and
expense are kept to a minimum.
b. Types of
Executive Recruiters
There are
basically two types of executive recruiters: retained fee and contingency fee. Both
retained and contingency fee recruiters perform the same essential service. However, their
working relationship with their clients is different, and so is the way these recruiters
charge for their service. Retained and contingency fee recruiters each bring certain
advantages and disadvantages to particular kinds of executive searches. Cost in fees is
basically the same (twenty five percent to thirty five percent of a candidate's first
years compensation), with the exception that out-of-pocket expenses are usually reimbursed
for retained recruiters.
Retained executive
recruiters derive their name from the fact that they work "on retainer."
Employers pay for their services up front and throughout the recruitment process. Retained
recruiters are typically paid for the search process regardless of the outcome of the
search, however most retained recruiters allow employers to cancel the search at any time
for prorated rates.
Retained recruiters
provide a thorough and complete recruitment effort, often involving multiple researchers
and recruiters on a single assignment. They usually create detailed reports on the
employer, the position, their research and recruitment efforts, candidate resumes,
interviews, reference checks and other tangible services that add value to the search
process.
They tend to work in
partnership with the employer, offering expert counsel throughout the search, and
requiring exclusivity and control over the hiring process. The retained recruiter may
participate in all client interviews with candidates, all related discussions within the
client employer, all negotiations, offers, and settlements. While the process may take
three or four months, the hire is typically guaranteed for a year or longer. Because a
retained executive recruiter spends so much time on behalf of each client employer, she
can only work with a few clients at a time (usually two to six). Retained recruiters will
usually present candidates to only one employer at a time and will maintain a two year
"candidate hands off" policy.
It is usually best
to hire a retained recruiter when an assignment is critical or senior in scope (seventy
five thousand dollars or more), when difficult to fill or requires a thorough recruiting
effort, when it requires strict confidentiality, or when locating the best candidate is
more important than filling the position quickly.
Contingency
executive recruiters derive their name from the fact that they work "on
contingency." Employers only pay for their services if an employer hires a candidate
referred by their firm. If there is no hire, then there is no fee due.
Most contingency
recruiters work quickly and uncover many resumes. They tend to provide more of a resume
referral service, and spend less time with each client. Because there is no financial
commitment from employers to support up front candidate research, contingency recruiters
tend to move on to new assignments more quickly once a job opportunity becomes difficult
to fill. Contingency recruiters find it is usually more cost effective to market
exceptional candidates to locate job opportunities than to recruit for employers and
locate difficult-to-find candidates. Most contingency recruiters fill lower to middle
management positions where candidate marketing can result in greater chances for success
due to the greater number of job opportunities. However some contingency recruiters will
not market candidates and will only recruit for employers.
The relationship
between contingency recruiters and their clients is usually less intense, with less
personal contact and a lower level of mutual commitment. It is not uncommon for an
employer to use several contingency recruiters on a single search, while continuing to try
and fill the position on their own.
Contingency
recruiters usually manage eight to twenty assignments at a time, and maintain a one year "candidate hands off" policy. They will usually present candidates to multiple
job assignments, and often face pressure working similar assignments with different fee
levels. Contingency recruiters generally guarantee their placements for thirty to ninety
days, but some offer no guarantee. Although the placement fees are usually twenty five
percent to thirty five percent a candidate's annual compensation, many contingency
recruiters are willing to negotiate their fees and some charge as little as fifteen
percent.
It is best to
utilize a contingency recruiter when the position is entry or mid-level management, when
filling the position rapidly is more important than locating the "ideal" candidate, when filling multiple positions for an employer with the same skill set, and
when it is important to fill the position at minimum cost.
c. Where to look
for an executive recruiter
The best place
to find a good recruiter is to begin with an in-house referral. Talk with the human
resource department and employer managers to see what experience they have had with
executive recruiters. Check with colleagues in other departments, peers at other employers
or the local trade associations for additional recommendations. Another place to find
comprehensive lists of executive recruiters is to purchase one of the major recruitment
directories such as The Directory of Executive Recruiters, by Kennedy Publications,
Hunt Scanlon's Executive Recruiters of North America, or visit the many Internet
directories of recruiters such as the Recruiter's Online Network at
www.recruitersonline.com
d. What to look
for in selecting an executive recruiter
- A proven track record. A good
recruiter should have up to seventy five percent in repeat customer business, and
completion rates that exceed eighty five percent.
- Search results. For each assignment,
find out how many candidates will be sourced, contacted and interviewed, and how many
finalists will be presented.
- Availability. If a recruiter is
working on more than three current assignments, you can expect limited attention. Junior
associates are no substitute to the quality recruitment offered by an experienced pro.
- Performers. Recruiters should be
doers not overseers. They should conduct the entire search from initial client discussions
to research, recruitment, interviewing and final selection. Many recruiters will send
their most accomplished recruiter or "rainmaker" on presentations to secure the
assignment, but quickly pass on the work to junior associates. Find out if others will be
involved with the assignment and what their roles will be.
- A recruiter not a recruitment firm.
The recruiter is the one performing the search, not the firm.
- Industry specialists, not
generalists. Specialty recruiters are more capable of completing an assignment
quickly. Knowing where to go to find the best talent, and having the ability to quickly
gain their confidence of talent is essential for a timely result. Recruiters that
specialize within the employer's unique segment of industry are often more effective.
- Appropriate position specialists.
Recruiters often specialize in lower, middle or executive level assignments. Find a
recruiter that specializes in the level position the employer is looking to fill.
- Trade association involvement.
Association involvement helps establish a recruiter's reputation and network of contacts.
Find out what personal involvement and contributions the recruiter has made through
participation in trade committees, writing articles for trade magazines, giving talks at
industry events, and other prominent networking avenues.
- Twelve month guarantee. Make sure if
the new hire resigns or is terminated within twelve months, the recruiter provides a
replacement at no professional fee.
- Recruiters with good references.
Validate recruiter claims of successes and industry involvement. Speak to references that
can discuss recent accomplishments, ethical recruiting practices, and prove long-term,
repeat business.
- Premium service. Cost is usually the
lowest factor on any hiring survey when employers are questioned on the most important
factors looked for in selecting an executive search. The old adage, "you get what you
pay for" is true in most cases when hiring an executive recruiter.
- Reasonable blockage. Check "off
limit" policies. Find out what firms are "off limits" to the recruiter
(protected firms that cannot be recruited from). If those firms are likely sources to fill
the position, do not work with a recruiter who cannot touch those executives.
- National capability. A national
recruiter can often recruit a localized market effectively, but a local recruiter rarely
can recruit a national market effectively. It is even far more important to find a
successful recruiter who will locate the best candidates than one who happens to be based
nearby.
e. Questions used
to Interview Recruiters
- What is your experience in
recruiting, and in our industry?
- What is your area of specialty within
our industry, and what locations do you specialize in?
- Have you filled any recent positions
at the level we are seeking?
- What do you know about our firm?
- What is your percentage completion
rate? What assignments have you not completed and why?
- What added value to you provide to
the search process?
- How quickly can we expect results?
- Are you licensed and regulated by
your state?
- What are your most significant search
accomplishments?
- What are some of your recent
assignments and can we check those references?
- Have you had to replace any
executives that were hired through you? What were the circumstances?
- What is your guarantee period?
- What is your process for working on a
search?
- How can you insure that you will find
the best candidates for the position? What capabilities and resources do you have for
researching and recruiting candidates?
- What is your involvement in the
research, recruiting, interviewing and hiring of candidates? Who else will be assisting
you and what will be their roles?
- What is your "off-limits"
policy? What firms are currently "off limits" to you?
- Are you a retained or contingency fee
based firm? What are your fees and what is your policy on expense reimbursement?
- Is your firm a member of any
professional associations? What involvement do you have?
- Why are you the best choice for us?
"The article above was written by construction recruiter Frederick Hornberger, CPC, president of Hornberger Management Company in Wilmington, Delaware (www.hmc.com), a construction recruiter specializing in senior level, executive search."
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Copyright 2008
Hornberger Management Company - Construction Recruiter. All Rights Reserved.
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