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>Employers
-Selecting A Search Firm
-Working With A Search Firm
-Exit Interviews
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Working With Your Search Firm During The Search
These are several things that you can do, as a client,
to ensure the successful fruition of the search when working
with your designated search firm.
1. You must discuss the priority your recruiter will
set on your search. The “research” phase can take from
one to eight weeks. This is when the recruiter is performing
research, systematically contacting resources, and
building a list of nominators and suspects. The length
of time will be directly related to your specs, the position,
the compensation, availability of candidates, and
the number of other projects your recruiter may be working
on.
2. Make certain that you are available to your recruiter
via telephone during the search phase. When in the “search”
phase, your recruiter will be contacting, evaluating,
and screening suspects for the position. The recruiter
will be selling the position, your company (if the search
is not confidential), the location, the challenge, and
the opportunity. If this is a contingency search, this
phase will likely be conducted via the telephone. If it
is a retained search, it may be done in person. Your recruiter
will be talking with hundreds of nominators, suspects,
and prospects. You need to arrange a reporting basis
with your recruiter. How often do you want them to report
to you and when? Access to you will determine how fast
your recruiter can proceed during the search phase. Questions
about the company, the search, the position, etc., are
bound to arise and, if you are not accessible to answer
them, your search may come to a halt.
3. Next comes the “presentation” phase of the search
- a very important step in identifying the “best
available candidates.” You must arrange for your recruiter
to present and discuss those candidates they feel
are right for the position. This cannot be accomplished
through reviewing resumes. If you believe you can select
the right suspects from resumes, you are relying
on a resume writer who is thorough and who has a writing
style that appeals to you. Your recruiter depends on your
feedback from verbal presentations to understand your
thinking and desires and, most importantly, to develop
that feeling and understanding for whom you will hire.
Ask your recruiter to describe the individual, and not
just the individual’s work and educational history. What
your recruiter should provide you with is what a candidate
has accomplished. A recruiter should also be able to describe
a candidate’s personality, why the candidate is changing
jobs, his or her earning history, why the candidate is
interested in your company, and what the candidate’s references
have to say.
4. Once you begin the interviewing process it must move
along smoothly and quickly. Delays in the interviewing
process have lost more good candidates for companies than
any other single reason. Your recruiter will arrange and
coordinate the actual face-to-face interviews but you
must be available for your recruiter for feedback after
each interview. Your recruiter will “ debrief” the candidate
and be in a position to share with you information gained
form the candidate’s perspective. You can rely on
your recruiter to provide insight that can help the decision-making
process.
5. Next is the “offer and negotiation” phase. Rarely
should you or someone in your company handle this
step. Your recruiter earns a living by being a negotiator.
Negotiating is something they do with great frequency.
You must be open about your feelings on the initial offer.
The offer must encompass all areas of the package - salary,
bonus, sign-on bonus, relocation, benefits, special “perks,”
etc. Your recruiter is in a position to know what the
candidate wants, and perhaps most importantly, the lowest
offer they will accept. Your recruiter needs to know from
you up front if offers are final and non-negotiable, or
if you are willing to listen to counterproposals.
The ease of the offer phase is contingent upon the communications
you have had with your recruiter throughout the search.
6. Finally, there is the “start and follow-up” phase.
Your recruiter will help the candidate with resignation
from their present employer and try to assure that a counter-offer
does not disrupt the process. The recruiter will also
work with the candidate to assure that the start and relocation
go smoothly. The recruiter will follow up with the candidate
through the first year of employment, and give you a status
report on how the person is adapting. This helps to minimize
the possibility of the candidate leaving the job.
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