Saturday, November 16, 2019
How to Get in Good with Recruiters
How to 'Get in Good' with Recruiters How to 'Get in Good' with Recruiters Donât burn your first bridge to the job. Recruiters speak up about what job seekers need to do to win their trust.Increasingly, recruiters represent the bridge between you and placement with a company. Build that bridge, and you may find yourself presented with opportunities you never even considered. Burn that bridge, and⦠Well, we all know what happens when we burn bridges.Ladders collected the advice of recruiters and those who have worked successfully with recruiters to provide recommendations for forging effective, long-term relationships that can lead to promising new professional opportunities.Understand the recruiterâs job and your own qualifications. Not surprisingly, recruiters said itâs important that job candidates understand the role of a recruiter. In short, the recruiter is charged with finding the best person for the position the client is looking to fill. If you are clearly not that person, you are wasting your time and the recruiterâs by trying to suggest otherwise. âIt is our job to find and recruit candidates who outshine those available in the conventional job marketplace,â said Jeremy Spring, vice president of business development and a recruiter at Elever. âWhen introducing yourself for consideration, try and objectively evaluate how your experience aligns with what the recruiterâs client company seeks. If you do not have VP-level experience, no recruiter will consider referring you for a VP-level position.âKnow whether you are working with an internal or external recruiter.There are two kinds of recruiters: internal and external. Internal recruiters work with one company; external recruiters work with many. An internal recruiter will have more intimate knowledge about a companyâs culture and inner workings, while an external recruiter will have a broader reach. Job candidates should work with the formerâs deeper knowledge of the open position and the hiring managers as well as with the latterâs wider field of co ntacts.Be proactive. âAn executive recruiterâs success is based on the relationships he or she is able to maintain,â said Eleverâs Spring. He recommends spending time researching the recruiting firms operating in your professional space. âMost recruiting firms, large and small, post available roles on their Web sites and provide contact information for the individual consultants working to fill the role,â he said. âAn introductory e-mail or phone call will put you on the recruiterâs radar. If your experience is aligned with the open position, a referral might result. If it does not, at least youâve opened a dialog that might prove useful on other engagements.âDonât be short-sighted. If youâre contacted by a recruiter and arenât currently in the market for a new job, donât be downright dismissive. You never know when you will be looking, and you want to remain in recruitersâ sights. âYou may not need a job right now, but thatâs not a sure thing at an y point in the near or longer term,â said Roy Cohen, author of âThe Wall Street Professionalâs Survival Guideâ and a career coach. âAt the very least, thank them for the call and ask how best to stay in touch.âBe respectful and polite. Recruiters who spoke with Ladders said, almost to a person, that respect and politeness is very important, but they donât always receive both from job seekers. Be sure to thank recruiters for their time, and follow up with an email to check in. âPoliteness is a huge key to cultivating a long-term relationship with a recruiter,â said Nicola Huns, owner of career services site Careerbuzz.com.Be mindful of the recruiterâs time. While itâs important to follow up with recruiters, donât cross over into pest territory. âOne big thing for candidates to do to get on a recruiterâs good side is to respect the recruiterâs time and not take up too much of it,â Huns said. âRecruiters are normally extremely busy people, and candidat es who call multiple times in one day will be pushed to the side because they are too intense and disrespectfulâ¦. If a candidate does not hear back from a recruiter, he or she should call them once and leave a message only once emphasizing how interested they are in the position.âTreat your conversations with recruiters like you would any interview.Too many people take their conversations with recruiters too casually, experts said. They added that you should be as prepared for your conversation with a recruiter as you would be for a conversation with a hiring manager. After all, if you donât get past the recruiter, you wonât get in front of the hiring manager. âTreat your introductory phone conversation like an interview, but without the suit-and-tie conventions,â Eleverâs Spring said. âWe want to hear about your accomplishments in tangible terms, since thatâs how weâll need to present them to our client company.âConsider constructive criticism.Itâs important to remember that the recruiter is working for a client and is paid to know exactly what that client is looking for in a job candidate. If the recruiter provides advice on ways to position your accomplishments to align best with those expectations, it would behoove you to accept the suggestions graciously. âThe recruiter knows what will and wonât fly with a particular client,â said Matt Scheihing, president of JMiles Personnel Services.Provide referrals. While recruiters have much to offer job seekers, job seekers have much to offer recruiters. Referrals are recruitersâ bread and butter; passing along the names of qualified peers will definitely improve and extend your relationship with a recruiter, whether you are a fit for a current job or not (and may benefit a job-seeking colleague at the same time). âIf there is one thing a recruiter loves, it is getting names of good people they can place,â said Tony Deblauwe, founder of consulting firm HR4Change. âIf you arenâ t interested or a fit when a recruiter calls, offer to give them names. Over time, you will get called again, and the gesture of giving referral puts you in front for future opportunities.â
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.