Distress purchase or planned recruitment? – most companies do not have an in-house recruitment team!

For HireIf you have read my previous blogs, you’ll know that I’m writing principally for what I believe is a neglected audience – and it’s not the big firms with their in-house recruitment teams. These are often very good but their companies recruit hundreds if not thousands of people every year. They have HR colleagues embedded in different Divisions of the firm across the globe and are kept up-to-date with all the likely comings and goings of key staff.  They know a new call centre is opening in Manchester and plan accordingly, often spending six-figure sums with a recruitment marketing specialist to make sure their recruitment is a success. However, despite their undoubted expertise and their brief to reduce costs, most good in-house teams still work with external recruiters (Resource Partners has considerable experience of providing such support) as they know there are certain specialist areas of recruitment where only a third-party expert will do.

In contrast, the audience for my current series of articles is the submerged nine-tenths of business and industry who cannot afford such support. A typical recruitment scenario for them would involve a small business owner coming into work on a Monday morning and being approached by their only valued staff member who will say quietly “can I have a word?” The inevitable result is a hastily scribbled advert that appears on S1jobs (because that’s the only job-board they have heard of) with some additional “services” tacked on because the S1 salesperson was short of target that month and the SME owner didn’t know what they were buying. CVs come in and then a crisis in the business means they all gather dust on a desk and by the time someone gets back to the applicants they have all got jobs elsewhere and the whole process repeats itself.

Alternatively, a recruitment agency is called and asked to get some CVs. Having spent a long time in the recruitment business I know that the quality of recruiter in agencies varies immensely.  Many have worked in bars, garages, call centres etc. and the industry brings them in, chews them up and, if/when they don’t make it spits them out again.  The churn can be horrific, but that’s the way it is.  That said, some do, obviously, become very good recruiters, although often it’s by selling their grandmothers en route.  And before you think this is a somewhat cynical, poacher turned gamekeeper view, I ask you to consider a client I worked with recently.  They had turned me down, preferring to go to a “big company” where they had met a senior person who promised them a first-class service.  The moment they needed to recruit someone the senior person disappeared and an inexperienced junior came on the phone.  A proper brief was not taken.  CVs appeared, that were not matched to the job.  The client called me and said, “sorry, can we start again…

Yes, outside the rarified world of in-house recruitment, most job vacancies occur in an unplanned and random manner.  The consequent “distress purchase” recruitment is too often made without any real knowledge of what is best modern practice. A lack of relevant experience leads SME owners and line managers to repeat the mistakes of the past or be lured by false promises from recruiters or the media and somehow or other they usually muddle through. But in a market where there are increasing skills shortages and almost full employment, it’s getting more and more difficult to justify this ad hoc response. Good recruitment is vital to future success so it’s amazing that such an amateur approach is ever considered acceptable.  Sensible firms don’t plan their finances without accountants or tax speclalists yet when it comes to hiring then many just do what they did the last time and hope it works.

Even when there is planned recruitment to expand the business, there is not time for most SME owners to learn and digest all the changes in the recruitment market and act accordingly.  Job-boards are declining in popularity, social media is increasingly important but difficult to get right, and, as I explained in my last blog, candidates increasingly want to see what your brand represents and promises for them.  You may not think that your 50 employee business has an employer brand, but that’s not the way candidates see it.  Similarly, you may not think that you need to do more than stick an ad on a job-board, because “that’s where everyone looks, isn’t it?”  Sorry, the world is changing faster than ever, often driven by technology and social media and if you don’t understand how to use them you’ll suffer in comparison to those who do.

This is the single biggest area of growth for Resource Partners.  Of course, we still provide CVs for customers, but increasingly our work involves a genuine partnership where we act as adviser, consultant (in the proper sense of that word) and confidant.  It is my firm belief that recruiters who think like we do and recognise that they have to offer far more than just CVs and some cheap advertising outlets, will be far more in demand than those who, like too many small businesses, are stuck in the past and reluctant to change. 

 Mark Lynch, Director, Resource Partners

What does the word “Recruitment” mean to you?

the placeWhat does the word recruitment mean to you?  You probably hear those constant ads from Indeed on the radio, promising to make it all so easy. If you are an in-house recruiter who is part of a big team at a blue-chip it means your daily job, much of which is taken up by trying to keep on top of all the latest developments in recruitment technology and fielding calls from the recruitment tech salespeople.

However, if you are like the vast majority of people in business who only have a need to hire new people, recruitment is something that is a pain in the unmentionables. It’s something that you have not had much, if any, training in – other than the accumulated wisdom passed on by your boss/predecessor, and that usually involves “call that agency, what are they called again, I think the number is with the HR person, what’s her name again? … and get some CVs here pronto.”

It needn’t be like this.  As someone who has spent most of his adult career working in recruitment consultancy, I am often amazed by how little many clients actually know.  Perhaps that’s understandable: it’s not their day job.  For those (the majority again) for whom recruitment is a distress purchase, made when someone inconveniently resigns out of the blue, the aforementioned recruitment agency, or an advert on a job-board, is the extent of their experience. It’s safe, but expensive and it sort-of takes the responsibility away, which is always nice, until it goes wrong…

In this series of blog articles I am going to try to address this audience, the unseen thousands of you out there who don’t want a recruitment consultant simply to take a brief and then bung you a wad of CVs, hope one floats your boat and then sends a bill for 15% of the starting salary.

Instead, wouldn’t it be good if the word “Consultant” was to the fore, and you receive advice and guidance on how to deal with almost any recruitment challenge you can imagine.  Rather than taking the money and running (until the next distress purchase), instead they show you how to use the best, most effective job-boards, how to use LinkedIn, how to craft a piece of advertising copy, why your brand is important even if you are an SME of six people, and how it’s vital to realise that today’s candidates don’t expect to sell themselves to you but expect you to sell your firm to them.  That would be good, so…let’s start with the basics – what are we trying to do when we recruit someone?

As a general rule (and there are always exceptions) most companies want to replace someone who has left with someone better.  That’s when it’s a distress purchase after a resignation. When it’s a new position you have no yardstick, other than the job and person specification, but you really do want the best possible person you can get, in almost every circumstance.  To sum it up, you want to introduce new, often specialist, skills into your organisation and you also, usually, want someone who will fit into your team.

That team bit is important. A friend was speaking to a famous football manager who explained that when he was looking to bring in a player he always sought someone with more talent than the incumbent, but the new person had to “fit into the dressing room, because if they don’t then the team falls apart very quickly.” Even if you have no interest in football, this is a statement of the obvious for every business, but it’s staggering how many times companies hire on talent and forget that the new boy or girl has to get on with the rest of the staff.

Secondly, we usually want to recruit someone quickly, especially if it’s to replace a leaver. However, that should not mean rushing things.  If you just call up a recruitment consultant they will (or at least they ought) to take a full brief.  Not only will they want to know what the job involves, they ought to want to see around your premises to get a feel for what this person will be coming into and if there are any issues that you might not see because you are too close to them.  Often firms struggle to recruit because they don’t offer the working conditions that candidates increasingly seek nowadays.  Millennials, although much pilloried for being self-centred snowflakes (sometimes correctly!), are nonetheless a significant part of many target audiences and you are increasingly going to have adjust to meet their demands as they come to dominate the labour market.

Make sure that you take the opportunity to review the job and person specification when someone leaves.  You’ll obviously be doing this if it’s a new position, but when it’s a replacement it’s scary how many line managers just blow the dust off the old job spec, ignoring the fact that it was written in 2002. As a result they are likely to simply recruit the same type of person as the one who has left.  Instead, unless it’s a really low-level role not requiring a lot of change, take the opportunity to ask yourself where your business will be in the next five years, how this new recruit will help you achieve your goals and consequently how the job/person spec needs to change.  Here, an external adviser, whether a recruitment marketing expert or a recruitment consultant who actually cares about long-term relationships (many don’t), can be a real help.

Set realistic timescales, don’t just do what you did last time automatically, and consider all the options. What are they?  Well, that’s what this series of blogs is about, so make sure you see my next article, to be published in a few weeks’ time.

Mark Lynch, Director, Resource Partners Ltd.