I ran into a gentleman today that claimed to cut Exec Search spend from $2.5M to $14k. This is nothing short of staggering . . . so much so that it seems like potentially too much of a good thing.
Let me explain: My first job out of the Service was as a Buyer for a very large 3rd Party Logistics/Grocery Retailer (I think it was #9 in size at the time). As a buyer, one of my key KPIs’ was ‘Service Level’ (range 0% to 100%). If I always had enough stock in the distribution center, I wouldn’t have a ‘lost sale’ when one of our stores ordered that product. So, a “perfect” Service Level was 100%, meaning I always had product in stock when stores ordered it.
However, Service Level wasn’t the whole story. Anyone who ordered far beyond what was necessary could maintain a 100% service level - but this would later present problems meeting minimum order requirements from vendors down the line. In a nutshell, if you over-ordered, you could hit that 100%.
Now, there was another counter-balancing metric that was also very important: ‘Overstock Inventory’. If you had product sit in the distribution center beyond a given point, it would become ‘overstock’. These numbers counted against us as well, so the perfect ‘Overstock Inventory’ number was $0. As you can see, achieving a 100% Service Level with a $0 Overstock Inventory was virtually impossible. If you overbought and had product sitting, it would come back to haunt you.
Here’s another irony: If you over-ordered, there were extensive additional costs. For example, the truckload would cost more, the handling costs would be higher (to put the product ‘away’), and the carrying costs would be higher. So, in the end, you would be operating in the red (or your purchased categories would) for your organization despite meeting a 100% Service Level with $0 Overstock Inventory over the short-run.
This begs the question: Assuming you cut your Exec Search spend to $0, what else gives? Is this the key metric some Internal Recruiters are using? What are the ramifications on business performance down the line?
I ask this because I can think of 2 distinct ways to cut Exec Search spend down to $0 immediately:
A. Hire 10 More Internal Recruiters (yeah, you’ll cut fees . . . but look at overall cost).
B. Relax Specifications and Hire All Job-Board Applicants (sure, this will further cut spend . . . but is there a long-term cost to the organization’s performance here?)
Some things for us to think through and discuss . . . .