Most people who become recruiters do not last. There are many reasons for that. Poor hiring decisions and inadequate training being high on the list.
But there is another key reason why so few people actually last in the hurly-burly world of agency recruiting.
It’s a frigging hard job!
So I know that sometimes you question why you do it. There are times you hate what you do. There are days you go home feeling deflated, worn-out and frankly, useless.
The world is littered with ‘ex-recruiters’, burnt out, scarred and resentful about their all-too-short recruiting career.
Seriously, the guy who cut my hair last week told me he had ‘been a recruiter once’.
It’s true too that being a recruiter can be the greatest job of all, but even so, to survive you have to know the pitfalls, prepare for them, minimise their impact where you can, and push through the inevitable challenges this job will throw you.
So what to do?
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Assuming the position's a match, Mahesh, much is driven IMO on candidate timing, whether there's something driving the candidate out of their present employer, and/or if the opportunity is clearly a differential step above their current situation.
If a candidate's pretty happy and nothing driving them out the door the closer the position emulates their current one the less chance of a hire from what I've experienced.
And in this economy the employers seem to demand a candidate have close to 100% of the skills required or they keep looking. In a good economy the norm is 70-80% with that 20-30% the candidate doesn't have being a motivating factor in their being interested in the position.
What a great post. Thanks, everything you said is true. There is no crying in recruiting. One of the big problems when hiring the 'sales personality' is that everyone wants instant gratification. You have to be in this for the long haul. It takes emotional stability, and maturity. It knocks the daylights out of you, yet the successes are highly satisfying.
Woo - hoo. Saying it how it is once again Greg!
Strong work, Greg! But one question for you; Why not refuse to accept this statement "Sure, a tiny percentage of our work is retained," Retained is an option, and it removes the vast majority of the headaches. It is , without question, more rewarding to remove the risk and work only on "a sure thing." I know it isn't easy to sell the retainer, but its VERY MUCH worth the effort!
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