If you are like most recruiters, human resources
are a department that you enjoy dealing with about as much as the
IRS. HR can play a vital role in moving the placement process
forward but the problem occurs when they insist on being the only
point of contact that you can deal with. This scenario generally
hurts all parties: HR, the candidate, the hiring manager and of
course you, the recruiter.
The motivation level of a good recruiter will
fall off the radar screen for this client when he hears that he is
stuck working exclusively with
HR. Now he will only send marginal people who happen to come
across his desk rather than taking the search seriously. Generally
speaking, the bigger the company the greater chance that you will be
dealing with increased red tape and bureaucracy. The exception to
this is if you are working on very senior level openings, which are
almost always handled directly by the decision-maker and are often
filled on a retained basis.
So, what do you
do if you get funneled to HR and are forbidden to talk to the hiring
authority? Here's the short answer- don't spend much of your
valuable time with a company like this. Are there exceptions? Yes,
but not often enough to invest the time. You can still send a resume
here or there if you are working with a competent HR person who can
get things done but generally you are better off finding a new
client that will be more flexible.
If you want to make an effort to work things out
with HR you do have some options. Here are some ideas for dealing
with this issue:
1. Target small to medium size
companies:
Smaller companies don't usually have a brand
name or huge internal recruiting machine and will value your
expertise and advice more than a household name corporation. These
smaller companies haven't grown to a size where they have enough
internal human resources support and are used to having recruiters
work directly with hiring authorities. If you work with them when
they are small and they do grow and create new bureaucracy, you will
be in a better position to be "grandfathered" in as the recruiter
who is allowed to work directly with hiring authorities based on
your reputation and history with the company.
2. Work on higher level
assignments:
Much of the value that recruiters can provide is in assessing soft skills that do not appear on a resume and cannot be screened by an automated database. These skills include leadership, boardroom presence, ability to sell ideas, initiative and project completion skills. The likelihood of working directly with the hiring authority increases if you are working and Retained and on positions requiring these skills.
Select here to see a Tool that will
help you Land Retained Searches.
3. Point out that candidate quality drops when
you have no direct Hiring authority
contact:
One thing to point out to HR is the fact that
candidates will not take the position seriously if they ask you to
describe the manager’s personality and style and your response is,
“I don’t know, I have no direct contact with him”. This hurts your
ability to attract happily employed, high caliber talent for the
company.
4. Ask tough technical
questions:
Another approach would be to ask very specific,
tough, technical questions of the HR person you are working with. If
he or she cannot answer them and starts squirming you now have an
excellent segue to say something like this:
"What we have found to be the most productive
method of conducting a search is when we are able to work
cooperatively with both HR and the hiring authority. If we only work
through HR, our effectiveness drops considerably because we don't
have first hand information as to why a particular candidate did
well or bombed that we can use to hone in on the best people.
Also, our credibility with candidates
we are recruiting drops considerably if we cannot answer any of
their questions about the process and the personality of the players
involved. This affects the quality of people that we are able to
attract for you. As you know, a big part of finding the right match
is the 'soft skills' like chemistry and personality and these are
only gauged if we have contact with the hiring
authority."
5. Be willing to negotiate and build
trust:
Tell HR that you want to work with them as a partner and will not go behind their back, but that you do need access to the hiring manager in order to be effective. Say something like this, “We want to become an extension of your department and make your life easier”. If necessary, copy your HR contact on all emails to the hiring authority to keep them in the loop or make other similar concessions.
Gary Stauble is the principal consultant for The Recruiting
Lab, a coaching company that assists Firm Owners and Solo Recruiters
in generating more profit in less time. His free monthly e-zine,
“Creative Recruiting” will help you to attract premium clients, make
more placements, and still be home in time for dinner. Subscribe
today at
http://www.therecruitinglab.com. There are also over 20 free Special Reports
online covering advanced marketing, firm management and
recruiting best practices.
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