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Alon, That is certainly encouraging news. As noted, the companies that I have interviewed with thought that those were extraordinary results. Prior to hearing this information, I had thought that you could be generating commissions relatively quickly with the proper mentoring, training and dedication.
Just out of curiosity, did you have the same success in the next several months?
Again, kudos!
Sid
Alon said:I completely understand where you are coming from. Its hard going back to certain structures once you have tasted a real commission check in the past. I get it.
I'm also in the process of trying to figure out if I should do this on my own. I got out of the biz last month after being in it for 5 months. You can't really put a price on the experience you gain. There are so many little beneficial details that I would have never picked up without observing my colleagues.
I guess I was one of the few ( according to Sidney) who were able to do 3 deals within my first 90 days. I did my first deal my 2nd month and did two deals my 3rd. This was in the current economy, just a couple months ago. I'm as confidant as the next guy, but realistically I don't think I could have done it without guidance.
I know its not much advice, but I hope it helps. Feel free to send me a message if you have any questions.
This is a very interesting topic that I have taken to heart. I, too, am considering becoming a recruiter. I have interviewed with several companies and I have heard the same story: it will take 3 to 6 months to make your first placement. Although, one of the companies that I am interviewing with explained that they have a new recruiter that made 2 and almost 3 placements in the first 90 days; but they thought this was rather extraordinary.
I have read that everyone is really feeling the pinch securing orders. With this in mind, what is a reasonable time frame to start seeing some placements, in light of the current economy of course.
Thanks.
Regarding- "However I have investigated that avenue and cannot at this stage of my life go back to an environment where the company will hire anyone with potential and see how it goes. (All the while the company makes a hefty portion of the fees as long as one of their recruiters places the candidate.)"
my question is why not?
this reminds me of the recruiting tip I left here
It takes years to really be good at this. You can and probably will make money before the "years" pass but to be very good at this, it takes time. There is nothing wrong with giving half your production away as long as you are learning and your placements are on the rise.
There are many companies now that are building their business models on motivating recruiters not to give away the chunk of placement fees by way of creative split models and things like that but really, it's those recruiters who can't function in a normal recruiting environment that latch on to this. I don't advise being creative in the beginning of one's recruiting career. Go work for someone who is successful and will teach you how to do this right.
Regarding- "However I have investigated that avenue and cannot at this stage of my life go back to an environment where the company will hire anyone with potential and see how it goes. (All the while the company makes a hefty portion of the fees as long as one of their recruiters places the candidate.)"
my question is why not?
this reminds me of the recruiting tip I left here
It takes years to really be good at this. You can and probably will make money before the "years" pass but to be very good at this, it takes time. There is nothing wrong with giving half your production away as long as you are learning and your placements are on the rise.
There are many companies now that are building their business models on motivating recruiters not to give away the chunk of placement fees by way of creative split models and things like that but really, it's those recruiters who can't function in a normal recruiting environment that latch on to this. I don't advise being creative in the beginning of one's recruiting career. Go work for someone who is successful and will teach you how to do this right.
Slouch said:Regarding- "However I have investigated that avenue and cannot at this stage of my life go back to an environment where the company will hire anyone with potential and see how it goes. (All the while the company makes a hefty portion of the fees as long as one of their recruiters places the candidate.)"
my question is why not?
this reminds me of the recruiting tip I left here
It takes years to really be good at this. You can and probably will make money before the "years" pass but to be very good at this, it takes time. There is nothing wrong with giving half your production away as long as you are learning and your placements are on the rise.
There are many companies now that are building their business models on motivating recruiters not to give away the chunk of placement fees by way of creative split models and things like that but really, it's those recruiters who can't function in a normal recruiting environment that latch on to this. I don't advise being creative in the beginning of one's recruiting career. Go work for someone who is successful and will teach you how to do this right.
"There are many companies now that are building their business models on motivating recruiters not to give away the chunk of placement fees by way of creative split models and things like that but really, it's those recruiters who can't function in a normal recruiting environment that latch on to this."
With all due respect, I couldn’t disagree more. It has been my experience over the past two years or so that more and more recruiting firms (up to probably 10 people) are not only willing but wanting to do more split work. And what is wrong with that? The average recruiter only places a very small percentage of candidates they source thus reducing the true margins of a placement significantly. And the fact is, the better a recruiter you are the more you are going to leave on the table. You can’t place everyone on your own. Why not expand your resources and monetize those assets?
I take offense to the notion that the only recruiters who do splits are those who can't function in a normal recruiting environment. What is a normal recruiting environment (and I've worked in large offices)? Is it normal to source an excellent candidate that because of limited resources is placed through another firm? Is it normal to have a great job order and while you’re sourcing another firm completes the search?
Since I made the full commitment to cooperate with other recruiters and firms by revenues and customer satisfaction have gone up significantly. I have found that combining resources moves more inventory and makes clients and candidates happier with more options and faster placements.
Hi Christopher,
let me explain. The original post by Jerry says he does not want to go work for a company and give away a good chunk of his production.
It is this distaste for sharing commission that drives a lot of the marketing from companies like dayak for instance where I have heard they make a case for a recruiter working an 8% fee.
I am not against in any way doing split business. In fact, when I ran my recruiting firm, we did hundreds of thousands of dollars in split business so again, I am not against it. What I am against is people going and becoming recruiters and thinking that the way you make placements is by utilizing split systems and whacked out creative financially driven models.
My feeling is that if you want to become a recruiter, you need to be trained by someone who knows how to make a placement from start to finish. This means coming in with nothing to sell and no one to sell it to and by the "end of the day" ending up with a fee. I really believe that if you start your day recruiting for half a fee, you will never know why being a recruiter is so good and the fundamentals of this business will never be clear.
When you talk to a client and they say I have 30 positions I need you to fill, you should only be interested in the 3 positions that are causing that company the most headaches because they are not filled. If you get excited that you can now pump 27 other positions through some third party system, you are wasting time.
I hope that makes sense. I read it over twice.
Christopher Poreda said:Slouch said:Regarding- "However I have investigated that avenue and cannot at this stage of my life go back to an environment where the company will hire anyone with potential and see how it goes. (All the while the company makes a hefty portion of the fees as long as one of their recruiters places the candidate.)"
my question is why not?
this reminds me of the recruiting tip I left here
It takes years to really be good at this. You can and probably will make money before the "years" pass but to be very good at this, it takes time. There is nothing wrong with giving half your production away as long as you are learning and your placements are on the rise.
There are many companies now that are building their business models on motivating recruiters not to give away the chunk of placement fees by way of creative split models and things like that but really, it's those recruiters who can't function in a normal recruiting environment that latch on to this. I don't advise being creative in the beginning of one's recruiting career. Go work for someone who is successful and will teach you how to do this right.
"There are many companies now that are building their business models on motivating recruiters not to give away the chunk of placement fees by way of creative split models and things like that but really, it's those recruiters who can't function in a normal recruiting environment that latch on to this."
With all due respect, I couldn’t disagree more. It has been my experience over the past two years or so that more and more recruiting firms (up to probably 10 people) are not only willing but wanting to do more split work. And what is wrong with that? The average recruiter only places a very small percentage of candidates they source thus reducing the true margins of a placement significantly. And the fact is, the better a recruiter you are the more you are going to leave on the table. You can’t place everyone on your own. Why not expand your resources and monetize those assets?
I take offense to the notion that the only recruiters who do splits are those who can't function in a normal recruiting environment. What is a normal recruiting environment (and I've worked in large offices)? Is it normal to source an excellent candidate that because of limited resources is placed through another firm? Is it normal to have a great job order and while you’re sourcing another firm completes the search?
Since I made the full commitment to cooperate with other recruiters and firms by revenues and customer satisfaction have gone up significantly. I have found that combining resources moves more inventory and makes clients and candidates happier with more options and faster placements.
No problem. It would have made for some good conversation if you did disagree. Have a good one.
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