I Recruit, Therefore I Am

Month: July 2014

Please Leave A Message and I’ll Call You Back As Soon As I Can

In my life as a Recruitment Agent, I’ve worked for a British company, an American company and a local company. The local company was by far the best because they understood the mentality behind providing service in Canada.

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What our British and American counterparts don’t understand is that we Canadians are a fickle bunch and need to be handled with care and caution.

The British way of doing things is to bully their way into the marketplace. If you don’t want to work with us, that’s fine, we’ll work with the competition across the street, steal all your best talent and put them to work there. That’ll show you.

The American’s believe that if they deliver all their pitches like infomercials, clientele will be lining up around the corner to buy their product. This is, after all, a nation of people who buy Miracle Spring Water off of their television for one guaranteed low price.

But Canadians don’t respond well to either of these techniques. They respond well to good, convenient customer service that is available to them WHEN THEY NEED IT. This last point is key. Their attitude is, we’ll let you know when we need you, otherwise go away. We’ve got better things to do.

One of the things that always catches outsiders off guard about working in Toronto is how passive aggressive we all are.

No one likes to pick up their phones, few like to return voice mails and if you earn the distinct privilege of working with your desired client, the moment you step outside of their comfort zone (IE start to become an inconvenience), there will be no warning. They’ll simply stop taking your calls and stop responding to your e mails. Don’t like it? Too bad. You blew it.

If clients are like that to us, then guess what?

We’re going to be like that to you, the candidate.

Why? Because similar to how our clients get frustrated when we hassle them too much, we get equally frustrated when hassled by you too much.

Last week I left a voicemail for a candidate who was one in a stack of twenty. I made the call, left the message then got up from my desk to tend to some other business. When I returned half an hour later I had three voicemails from this candidate waiting for me. That’s an average of one call every ten minutes. I will never call this person back.

When your follow-up is that aggressive, you don’t look like a keen performer who is interested in the opportunity. You look desperate and in need of any job. You generally will not find Desperate and in need of any job listed as a required skill on a job description, so why give that impression before we have met?

You must instead trust that one message will do, that it is safe in my voicemail and that I will follow-up at my next available convenience. End of story. If you haven’t heard from me within 24 to 48 hours, then sure, give me another call. Anything more is excess.

A similar rule applies to following-up post interview. If you e mail me once before week’s end, I’m going to think that you’re organized and on top of things. If you follow-up every day for two weeks I’m going to think you’re sitting at home, desperate for any job that comes your way. I don’t want to hire that person.

Remember, if you are being recruited, chances are that you are but one candidate on a pile of twenty to thirty. Every Recruiter is looking for an excuse to exclude you from that pile. If the initial impression of you is If this guy is this big a pain in the ass before I’ve even met him, I don’t want to think about what he’d be like to work with, that’s a good enough excuse for me.  

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The Hidden Downside of Working With A Recruitment Agency

Here’s a scenario:

You met with a Recruitment Agent who promised you the sun, the moon and the sky.

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The week after the initial meeting your phone rings. It’s the Recruiter. They’ve got a gig for you. It’s only for a couple weeks. Could potentially extend to a month or two. Fairly standard work, but for a reputable company and decent money in your pocket. You’ll take it. You sign on the dotted line and kick back, relaxed that your unemployment blues look to be coming to an end.

You do the gig, love the people, love the company, but they don’t have anything more for you to do outside that initial two week engagement. You thank them, they thank you and you go about your merry way. Your Recruiter says they are working diligently on finding you your next gig. You don’t hear from them in six months.

The unemployment blues are starting to get you down again, when a sliver of light peaks through the cracks. The company you temped at six months ago gives you a call. They currently have a full-time opening and loved your work so much they want you to come in and meet with them about it.

You ace the interview and they’re ready to move forward until they get a call from your Recruiter. They’ve caught wind that the client is preparing to send you an offer, the agency has you under contract and they’re looking for a finder’s fee on your head.

The client refuses to pay. The agency says “tough shit” and you, once again, are out of a job. The company that swore they would do everything in their power to help you secure a job, has just screwed you out of one.

This Actually Happens
 
Provisions are sewn into every agency contract that will prevent you from doing work with any one of their clients without them collecting a fee on your head. It doesn’t matter that you only worked for them for two weeks. It doesn’t matter that they haven’t called you in six months. If that client wants to consider bringing you back, the agency isn’t going to let you go without collecting a fee, which, in most cases, and with good reason, the company will refuse to pay.
 
This is the Catch 22 that you must confront every time you decide to deal with an agency, especially on a temp or contract basis. Without the agency you may never have gotten the gig. Because you got the gig you won’t be able to work full-time for that company unless they pay your agency the standard fee. Bummer.
 
The Moral of the Story: Before signing any agency agreements, make sure to read all of the fine print and decide if it is really worth agreeing to not work directly with a client without the agency managing the relationship. This is why it is especially imperative to trust your Recruiter and ensure that they have your best interest in mind. If they don’t, the only loser will be you. 


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