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Question from a contact last week: Why does working with a recruiter feel so inconsistent?
On the job seeking side, her experience was theyâre all over you constantly. Or nowhere to be found.
On the hiring side, theyâre either spot on with their candidates. Or they find 1-2 then flood your inbox with a bunch that arenât even close.
Thereâs the obvious âsome are just better than others.â But Iâll take it a few levels further:
đIt isnât a recruiterâs job to find people jobs. Itâs to help companies hire.
Doesnât matter if itâs an internal or external recruiter. Their entire reason for being is hiring, not job seeking.
That does *not* mean recruiters arenât motivated to help job seekers. There is no better way to gain future clients or pipeline future hires & referrals than building good will.
Pay it forward and good things happen. But time is limited. Hiring is the priority.Â
đOpen jobs are limited. Even in great markets.
Itâd be a recruiterâs dream to have a job for everyone. But for the majority of people at any moment in time: they got nothing.
Agency recruiters get access to the most critical openings at their clients. Internal recruiters get access to one.
Itâs math. Thereâs no magic job wand they can waive to hook everyone up.
But Iâll throw shade where itâs due:
đSome recruiter are absolutely sh*t at setting expectations.
Some are too junior. Some hate giving bad news. Some are pressured by their agencies to hit ridiculous numbers targets.
Too many job seekers have unrealistically high expectations. Too many recruiters arenât able to reset them.
đRecruitment technology is a pile.
Weâre launching a new website with HubSpot. Iâm learning about all the segmentation and automated features. Common CRM stuff. Itâs all included. Mind blown!
Why? Because recruitment tech is terrible. It doesnât support recruiters to work at scale.
There are no words to describe how far behind ATS systems really are. Workflows, triggers, and notifications should make ghosting impossible. But ATS systems typically donât have these or orgs donât have the budget & resources to set them up properly.
Individual recruiters create manual processes to trigger follow ups for hundreds and thousands of job seekers. It doesnât work.
đSLAs are often silly with no basis in reality.
On the hiring side now. The idea of setting metrics for submissions, time to fill, ratios, etc., all sounds amazing.
The problem is: they vary immensely from one opening to the next. Talent pools are different. So are hiring requirements.
Whether itâs client expectations or internal agency playbooks (âhit these numbers to succeedâ): they tend to be uniform.
SLAs are not one size fits all. Each industry, level, and position will have different ratios.
Without that understanding? CYA behavior takes over. Numbers get fudged for activity sake. âFillerâ submissions go through the roof.
Quality over quantity should be the focus. But thatâs not the reality much of the industry lives in.
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