The secret to "fun and money" in recruitment! A simple formula that guarantees billing success

For all my blog posts please visit http://gregsavage.com.au/

I was walking down the street the other day when I ran into an old colleague, an ex-employee actually, from my days as the owner of accounting and finance recruiter, Recruitment Solutions.

We talked for a while, and as we parted she said with a huge smile, “ Still following that old success formula, Greg. It has made me millions!” At first I could not for the life of me work out what she was talking about. But then it slowly came back to me. Years ago I coached all our staff on a very simple but powerful way to keep focussed on the things that drive success in our business. All our managers ran their business to this formula, and it was our foremost diagnostic tool when an individual or a business unit was failing to deliver. I spoke about it at recruitment conferences all over Australia, and indeed many other parts of the world, and it always brought the same response

“So simple… yet so true!”

I went back to my office and dug up the old notes. And there it was. But what struck me was how valid that same little formula is today. No amount of technology has changed the key drivers of success in recruitment and staffing. If you want “fun and money” from this job…and who does not…then this is your holy grail.

So it’s time to dust it off

Success = Activity x Quality x Target Market

I believe that activity is key to the ongoing success of any commercial recruiter. It’s not all about activity, but activity counts. You just have to do a certain amount of ’stuff’ to get the results you want. Now, those activities might vary a little depending on your sector, your experience, and the depth of your customer relationships, but they are likely to include all the usual suspects such as client visits, client calls and talent interviews. But these days we are going to want to add new activities; networking events, and maybe even tweets and connections, if we have a well-evolved social networking component to our work. The point is I have never seen a successful recruiter who does not consistently churn out activities that drive the outcomes we seek. It just comes with the territory.

But it’s not all about activity is it? In fact too much activity, of the wrong kind, and of inferior quality, will be counter-productive. Hundreds of low quality, ill thought-through cold calls, for example, asking “got any jobs?” is not going to enhance your billings or your reputation. No, the second component of the success formula is quality. We have got to have lots of activity to be successful, but it needs to be activity of the highest quality. And by quality I mean quality through every step of the process. The quality of your advertisement or your head hunt call, the quality of your screening call, the quality of candidate interviewing, the skill with which you take a qualified order, the way you brief your talent prior to interview, your post interview client debrief. It goes on and on, because in fact our job is made up of thousands of tiny little interactions. And our success is driven by the volume of those interactions(activity), but also crucially, the quality of those interactions. And that is where a skilled recruiter will display her well-honed questioning skills, influencing skills, counseling skills, persuasion skills and negotiation skills. That is the quality I am referring to.

So success is about activity, and success is about the quality of that activity. But there is a third leg to the equation. One most recruiters fail to spot. We have to do lots of activity. Yes! We have to maintain high quality. Yes! But we have to do that high quality activity……with the right people!

If you do 15 client visits a week, and the quality of those visits is superb, you can still fail if you are meeting with two- bit companies that have no hiring plans, or if you meet people who are not decision makers. If you conduct the best candidate interviews in recruiting history, and you do 15 such interviews a week, you can still fail if you don’t interview in-demand talent who have the skill-sets your clients will pay for.

And I know what you’re thinking now. You are thinking “but this is so obvious”. I know. Isn’t it just?

BUT DO YOU DO IT?

In 30 years of coaching recruiters and running teams of recruiters, whenever I have seen someone go off track or a team start to fail, I have always found the answer by applying this formula.

Are we doing enough activity?
Is that activity of the right quality?
Are we doing it with the right people?
It has never let me down. The reason for the failure will be found in one or more of these areas.

And the funny thing is, that the explosion in technology impacting our industry makes applying this formula even more pertinent. We all know people who pump out lots of activity. Check out some recruiters onTwitter for a day if you want a modern example of dubious productivity. But is it quality stuff? Is it targeted to the right audience?

So there it is . The holy grail of how to be great at this job

Activity x quality x target market

Please remember me when it makes you rich and famous :)

For all my blog posts please visit http://gregsavage.com.au/

Views: 178

Comment by Hassan Rizwan on September 29, 2009 at 3:21am
Great post Greg. what i like about your posts is that you take out a story of your life which you link to a valuable lesson every time. As i was reading Randy's post of Actual Leadership, which is for the purpose to benefit the people around. You are certainly turning out to be one. great to have you in my contacts. stay in touch :)

Hassan Rizwan
Hirelabs
Comment by Greg Savage on September 29, 2009 at 4:03am
Thanks Hassan. I greatly appreciate your comments. Cheers
Greg
Comment by Thomas Patrick Chuna on September 29, 2009 at 8:08am
This is great. thanks for posting.
Comment by Bill Morgan on September 29, 2009 at 5:39pm
You are absolutely correct in this. We can measure activity until we are blue in the face, but if half those calls are to existing clients that don't give us business it's all for naught.
Thanks for that message. I just sent it out to our team as a reminder.

Bill Morgan
Branch Manager-Philadelphia
Segula Techologies
Comment by Charles Van Heerden on September 30, 2009 at 3:31am
Greg, very relevant not only to recruitment, but other areas as well. Thanks for sharing this! Your formula covers both efficiency and effectiveness, again highlighting that there a no short cuts.

To me consistency is very important, as I have experienced different standards from recruiters from the same organisation.
Comment by pam claughton on September 30, 2009 at 9:39am
Greg,

Excellent post, and so very true! That 'formula' may be simple, but it works if follow it. :) Pam
Comment by Andrew Hermiston on September 30, 2009 at 12:28pm
Hey Greg

Your post will be the cornerstone of my next account managers meeting. Well said!
Comment by Tony Hotko on September 30, 2009 at 8:00pm
Greg,

It's a great simple formula. The hard part is breaking down each part of that formula. Keep up the great posts! Thank you.
Comment by Alex Putman on October 1, 2009 at 10:03am
Thank you for boiling this down to the simplest points! I think we get so caught up in measurements we forget the simple items. Excellent perspective!
Comment by Erica Hood-Vincent on October 12, 2009 at 2:00pm
This is a great post - Very defined yet simple and to the point - thanks for sharing!
Erica Hood-Vincent
Milwaukee
EHV Consultants

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