Job Seekers - Want a sure fire way to get recruiters to call you back? To be proactive? To work FOR you?
It's so simple, and so few candidates do this. And the higher up the management chain the candidate is, the more effective they can be using this strategy. Interestingly, the higher up the management chain the candidate is, the LESS LIKELY they are to actually do this! It's such an easy way to stand out, such an easy way to get priority and additional help from recruiters.
Read more ...
Unfortunately, reaction to a difficult job market causes many candidates to take out their frustrations on recruiters - this is counter-productive for the candidate. It's not a recruiter's job to help candidates, but they can provide tremendous help if they wish to help you.
The best way to encourage a recruiter to help you is by adopting a different paradigm - Flip your old way of thinking 180 degrees.
Stop even thinking that a recruiter works for you … they don't. They work for the client, and are paid only if they find an exact match in a competitive recruiter market. Retained recruiters are also paid to find exact matches. Even if you suggest that you'll throw business to the recruiter when you land your management job, a recruiter is in the immediacy business, and operates just-in-time. So next year or next month provide little incentive.
Recruiters work with hundreds or thousands of candidates at the same time. Why aren't you getting a call back to "check in"?
Here's are the cold, hard facts of life:
- It's not a recruiters job to call you
- It's not a recruiter's job to return your call, unless they have news to advance you for a specific position.
- It's not a recruiter's job to update you on the market or on a specific opportunity.
- Most recruiting offices are not staffed to provide communications for the sake of "politeness".
- Often the person that the candidate communicates with is a "sourcer", and is not the person in contact with the hiring manager - that's often a senior recruiter, who typically spends time talking to hiring managers, rather than candidates.
- Good recruiters work with more candidates than just you - they work with thousands.
It's not the recruiter's job to manage your career - to a recruiter there's just no time. You're asking them for help, remember?
So how can you change this? Adopt the mentality that you work for the recruiters!
OK, you don't want to be a headhunter … so how are you going to work for recruiters? Here's 10 tips:
- Work for the Recruiter: Tell the recruiters you work with that you will work for them … and mean it. Back it up by giving them information about available jobs and candidates.
- Be an exact match: Give FAST turnaround and customize your resume within hours to be an exact match for the job. The fastest matches get interviews (http://recareered.blogspot.com/2009/09/differentiate-your-resume-with-winning.html).
- Provide Value: Every time you speak to a recruiter, have something to give them that they find valuable, even if they call you - A job lead, a candidate referral, a web resource, a networking event. If a recruiter recognizes WIFT (What's In It For Them) and they recognize they get valuable information every time they talk to you, then they'll call you back.
- Personalize: Not every recruiter goes to networking events, so provide value that's important to THAT recruiter. Recruiters specialize, and most Technology recruiters can't help your friend in Accounting, and don't care about openings in customer service. Ask the recruiter what information is valuable – what should you keep your eyes open for?
- Be responsive: Call the recruiter back quickly. Recruiters win interviews by responding quickly. If you respond quickly, the recruiter has a better chance of getting you an interview.
- Co-Opt: Make the recruiter feel like a friend. People naturally work harder for people they like.
- Respect the recruiter's time: Email is an efficient communication method for recruiters. Even though you may prefer the phone, think WIFT.
- Be a Fountain of Info: About your past employer, about current interviews, about jobs you've seen. Tell all – information is your best currency.
- Help in matching: If you see a job that a recruiter lists, if you are a strong match – send a customized resume(revised to match the job & keywords), with a very brief email to let them know why you are a match. If you are a stretch and don't match all the criteria, don't send.
- Provide introductions: Set the recruiter up up in person meetings with relevant hiring managers and candidates. If you can't do in person, use emails and/or LinkedIN.
- Be Positive and friendly: Be nice, make their day, tell a funny joke. Recruiters don't like putting bitter people in front of clients.
And as a bonus, #11
I can't tell you the number of candidates who put themselves in conflict with recruiters by with holding information, even when directly asked. The job market is more an d more transparent each day, so telling a recruiter what companies you've interviewed with, what jobs you see, won't increase competition. If that recruiter doesn't pitch the company for the job order, someone else already is. So withholding doesn't lessen your chances of getting THAT job, but it creates mistrust between the recruiter and you.
I challenge you to try this tactic for a month. After you're HONESTLY tried these tips. if you find recruiters who don't respond to this…fire them and work with someone else.
Like this article?
Subscribe here and have daily tips delivered to your email.
or delivered to your RSS reader.
For access to more information:
Become a fan of reCareered on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Chicago-IL/reCareered/21126045429
Join Career Change Central on Linkedin: http://www.linkedin.com/e/gis/1800872
Related Articles:
5 Ways Social Media Gives Job Seekers An Advantage In A Recession: Best of reCareered
Interview Road Kill - “I Haven’t Done It, But I Can Learn”: Best of reCareered
Email your request to phil.reCareered@gmail.com to enroll in a free group teleseminar "Accelerate Your Job Search - tools you can use".
Source: http://reCareered.blogspot.com
1 comment:
Music to a recruiter's ears and great advice. While we wish we could provide all the services that candidates often expect (and perhaps rightly so), we simply cannot.
Networking with recruiters when they call you will absolutely accelerate your search.
Post a Comment