Being a hiring manager, staffing becomes one of the most important aspects of your job and, if not done correctly, the most time consuming and damaging. Choosing the right candidate to join your team could be the difference between hitting your goals and exceeding expectations or having severe discord and turnover. A bad hire is an expensive hire so it is imperative that, as a hiring manager, you use best practices when searching for the right candidate.
In this discussion we are focusing on how a hiring manager should work with a recruiter whether they be internal to your organization or as a third party agency. Here are a few short tips on best practices.
Relationship
Your recruiter is your partner and the best will always aim to develop a consultative relationship with their hiring manager. Being a manager, your time is valuable and, your recruiter will understand that. Make yourself available to share feedback, review candidates and schedule interviews. Understanding who is the expert and in which areas is key in this relationship. Your recruiter has knowledge in staffing and has a much stronger sense of what is available to you in the market place. You are the expert in your domain and a good recruiter would never assume that they carry that expertise. Treat your recruiter as you would your doctor or lawyer. Seek their counsel and advice but at the end of the day understand that it is your decision.
What does it mean to you
When engaging the services of a recruiter,particularly an agency recruiter, you must understand their value proposition. What does it mean to you? What advantages do you hope to gain by working with an agency recruiter? Here are a few to think about
- market knowledge
- pricing
- availability of skill set
- competition
- time management
- lower the risk of offer refusal
Time Management
Working with the right recruiter will save you time and headache. Ask to receive multiple resumes in one email and that the presentations include short "sale" points for each candidate. These should highlight why the candidate is a good match for your job. Also, set times in your calendar to review the presentations over the phone to walk through the candidates' backgrounds. Sometimes a quick discussion may reveal something that you have overlooked and you can learn about intangibles which are not evident on the resumes. The last thing you want to do is miss out on the right candidate. Lastly agree to follow up in timely manner and share feedback on after interviewing the candidates. Being delayed or tardy does not make a good impression on prospective candidates. Regardless of who you are or how strong of a reputation your company has, the best candidates always have some other opportunity to consider. Your opportunity is never too good to be turned down.
Communication
This is important and must work both ways. As a manager you are busy and your time is valuable. The best recruiters will be proactive and call you when they have questions. You must be open to to discussing candidates, feedback and schedule over the phone as well as email. Phone discussions are quicker and greatly reduce the chance of misinterpretation which is a crux of emails.
Internal vs Agency
So the constant tug of war between Internal recruiting resources versus external resources such as Agencies generally causes much strife if not dealt with properly. Some internal recruiting functions have exceptional ability but many are just aspects of the HR department. If the internal recruiting function is of the latter then, most likely, the staff is overwhelmed and unable to dedicate resources towards recruiting and you will not be seeing the best candidates in the market Also, internal recruiting functions have their hands tied when it comes to sourcing from competitors. Agencies have free reign to source from companies you believe have the right talent. A good recruiter will sift through hundreds of resumes and present only what is relevant to your needs. External agencies tend to specialize in particular skill sets and have a much stronger network of relevant talent. Due to an overwhelming influx of resumes to an internal recruiting function, there is often the issue of poor vetting where many irrelevant candidates are presented and some of the best are overlooked
These are just a few tips on how you, as a hiring manage,r should work with a recruiter. Let your search be painless and error free so that you can focus on doing your job. Use the best recruiter and establish a long term relationship.