You may rest assured that this situation will not last.
The web is best when it tears down the friction that separates information from the people who need it. The folks who work hard mining data manually today will be flipping burgers in the near future. The skills required to move forward are unlike the ones being taught. Contemporary sourcing is a dead-end occupation with little in the way of transferrable skills.
Next generation recruiting is about relating intimately, not about mutual discovery. It's about fidelity and long term value exchange, not one night stands. It's about data that updates itself because the relationship is constantly working. Finding each other? Easy. Building an enduring relationship? Hard.
For a while, sourcing will be a high dollar, easy pickings income source. But, in the relatively short term, the need for the expertise will evaporate. Former sourcing luminaries will be familiarizing themselves with the alarm on the French fry machine and the relative difference between Rare, Medium and Well done.
Evaporate, as in "What air freshener scent would you like with your car wash?"
So, what do you do if you're a sourcer (or any kind of Recruiter, for that matter)?
Tags:
Keith, does this match your experience?
John, I disagree that internet research and sourcing skills are not transferrable. A talented researcher/sourcer could work in many industries doing many things. Law firms doing legal reasearch. Libraries (public or university). Sales organizations finding competitive intelligence. Generating leads for sales teams.
And, not everyone is on LinkedIn or Facebook. In fact, not everyone is on the internet. Warren Buffett is a good example. I need to email him and I can't find his email address. I've reached out to several other people who also can't find his email address. I'm beginning to think he doesn't use email. Is that possible in this day and age? If anyone reading this is up to the challenge, go for it! My email address is amanda.blazo@govig.com if you find anything.
A few years ago we got a search assignment from a client for a role that there are only about 10 people in the entire US qualified to do. They were NOT on the internet. However, 1st, 2nd, 3rd degrees of seperation came into play. We found out who they work with on many levels and reached out to those people (through internet research and then phone sourcing and recruiting). We did find the right people.
In the past 3 years I've seen internet research change so much that we've revised our training manual for internet researchers at least 4 times. So it is true that if you learn a skill one way today, it may be dead in 2-3 years. But that's always been the case with internet research and sourcing. New tools come up, tools disappear. New techniques come up and old techniques become less effective.
I hold the opinion that recruiters who are really good at recruiting (no patience, building relationships, building trust and running process) don't have the profile or skills necessary to also be really good at internet research. I also hold the opinion that people who are really good at internet research (patient, curious, open to change on a daily basis, inquisitive) don't have the profile or skills necessary to be really good at recruiting. So, in my opinion and based on the statistics of our very successful third party recruiting firm and our off shore internet research/sourcing firms, they both are necessary and most people can't be really good at both. So we let everyone do what they do best. Our recruiters don't search on the internet and our internet researchers don't make recruit calls. It works out really well. We have recruiters with 3-4 hours of phone time each day (that's connect time, not time available to be on the phone) and billing $200K-$500K per year each and have a $30/$1 ROI on our internet research. If that means it's dead, then we'll take dead!
Great ideas receive opposition from the first born.
Einstein was himself a first born child but so were the majority of his opponents. Last born children are much more open to new ideas. I wouldn't have believed it but apparently there are good studies proving it.
I still wonder how much of Einstein's briliant work was a result of synergy with his first wife....he never seemed to do anything special again after he dumped her for his cousin...she was the one with the networking skillz and it was actually her hand that wrote the great papers...
Recruiting Animal said:Great ideas receive opposition from the first born.
Einstein was himself a first born child but so were the majority of his opponents. Last born children are much more open to new ideas. I wouldn't have believed it but apparently there are good studies proving it.
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