sally 2006-6-10 08:30 PM
Without competition, corporate recruiting is doomed to mediocrity
[b] Is the Business Model for the Corporate Recruiting Department Fundamentally Flawed?[/b]I OU{!hO!ZZ
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In this article, I'm going to make the case that the underlying organization and structure of most U.S. corporate recruiting departments are fundamentally flawed. In fact, in many ways they resembles the worst performing business model of them all — a not-for-profit, government-funded, bureaucratic monopoly. Worse, unless big changes are made, companies who use this outdated model will never find enough top people to meet their business needs.1Q
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As a starting point, let's use this definition of a business model from investorsdictionary.com:
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A business model (also called a business design) is the mechanism by which a business intends to generate revenue and profits. It is a summary of how a company plans to serve its customers. It involves both strategy and implementation. It is the totality of: K^$a5S7[HpOO3GL
How it will select its customers J j {TZ2[
How it defines and differentiates its product offerings
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How it creates utility for its customers
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How it acquires and keeps customers 9lT9A!pyjO&h:c
How it goes to the market (promotion strategy and distribution strategy)
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How it defines the tasks to be performed
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How it configures its resources
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How it captures profitn]"VP n
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Since most corporate recruiting departments aren't profit centers, some would contend that this definition doesn't apply. I'd counter with the idea that not being a profit center is the root cause of the problem. When a business department is considered overhead, the goal is to reduce expenses, not maximize performance. So, right away, the rules of the game are tilted against success. How many corporate recruiting departments have enough resources to do their jobs properly? As a profit center, they'd be able to easily justify the extra resources needed on an ROI basis.'M
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We can get some clues on how to better organize and structure the corporate recruiting department by comparing it to its competition: third-party recruiting agencies and executive search firms.,| `p7z$v)~?8v
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Contingency agencies are quite similar to corporate recruiting departments in some respects. Contingency recruiters have lots of requisitions to handle, and they have to move fast. Third-party contingency recruiters don't spend a lot of time with their clients, so sending in candidates is often hit or miss.
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But, this is where the similarities end. Contingency recruiters are in business to make money, and the good ones make lots of money. And, they pay their good recruiters much more than corporate recruiters make. The reason they can afford to do this is their business model.
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Consider this: The key to success in contingency search is the ability to move fast, present decent candidates, hope a few get hired, and then pay their recruiters a small base and a good commission for making placements. So, this is a low-risk, high-profit business.
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To make it even better, recruiters at contingency firms can cherry-pick their assignments. They don't have to work every requisition or job order. This makes life much easier. They only need to work the assignments in which they have a pipeline of candidates.
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Developing that pipeline of candidates is easier, too. Good candidates like to work with good recruiters at contingency firms since they'll then be able to look at more than one company. Specialty recruiters at contingency firms have it even better. They can maximize their performances by further developing a network of high-demand candidates in a narrow, high-demand niche.
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Recruiting networks (e.g., Hireability.com) provide contingency firms with another competitive edge over corporate recruiting departments. By sharing fees, assignments, and candidates, they can close more deals more quickly. s ^"_%g)\2I9F
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In comparison to well-run contingency firms with strong, well-trained specialist recruiters, corporate recruiting departments don't stand a chance. The only reason they survive is their monopoly power. They control the budget for outside fees and prevent the competition from showing them up. Our surveys indicate that hiring managers — the ultimate customers here — would prefer to use strong outside agencies, but are prevented from doing so by their internal recruiting departments. Adding a little capitalism and competition might help here.J!FId{$R/U
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Now, let's examine the retained executive search firm's business model in comparison to the traditional corporate recruiting department. In fact, many corporate recruiting departments came into existence with the idea that they could provide executive search-like quality candidates at a much lower cost. Few have been successful on this comparison.
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As a business model, retained executive search firms make lots of money, and the best retained executive recruiters earn executive-level compensation. However, this model is fundamentally different than corporate recruiting. For one thing, retained recruiters handle very few assignments — two or three at any one time is not uncommon, with five or six being the maximum. Not only do they specialize by function, but they also have a team to help conduct research, source, recruit, and screen candidates. Their fees are high — along with the expectation that candidate quality will be exceptional. This is all justified by the idea that they are recruiting for people who will hold high-impact, strategic positions.
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