sunny 2007-2-8 10:29 AM
Headhunter Reality Stories
Not only is this a great career, but it saves me lots of money on cable movie-channel subscriptions, as nothing can be as entertaining as the fits and starts, about-faces, shenanigans, internal conflicts, behavior irregularities, lies, deceit, and manipulation our sometimes prospective clients and candidates endear us with. D/ah)n3Jl
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Here are three of my most notable stories, which are funny looking back 10 years later, but they were not quite so funny at the time:$no6YB8Fm-b o`
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[b]First Story: Will a Job Offer Get Me Promoted?[/b]$[TtdvU^
A managerial candidate from a familiar company called, desperately seeking help to get out of her current situation. After meeting with her to determine that she was committed and not just having a "blue" day, I took on the project of representing her to a select group of presidents I knew would have interest. ^;I v!atc'M
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She had a professional appearance, solid resume, and articulate demeanor, but I had that little voice deep inside that cautioned me, as she was too perfect in some aspects and a bit too scripted.
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In about four weeks we had an interview, which led to a second and third meeting and to an eventual six-figure offer with a multi-thousand dollar sign-on bonus. Everything came in precisely at the price point she had stated she required on multiple occasions to accept the offer.
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She accepted and resigned. My first "red flag" was when I found out she gave a five-week resignation notice. Five weeks! And no she wasn't quite that important in her current role. ]s*C4HK c;M
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On the Tuesday after the Monday she was to begin her new job, I received a call from the president's office of the new employer. "We assume you've heard what happened?"N;t6Uw,G4Gz
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I replied sarcastically and said, "No. Why would anyone think of informing me of anything?" pAb{
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"She called here Friday," the company manager said, "leaving a confusing message about a counteroffer and that she'd call back, but she never called back and never showed up yesterday."
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In calling the candidate, I found out this was not her first counteroffer acceptance. But she did not reveal this. I had a co-worker reveal her past history to me.
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In fact, it was not the second counteroffer acceptance. A.UFJ z
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I discovered this was the third time she accepted a counteroffer with the same employer within the five-year period she was working there! She received significant salary increases, a larger office, and enhanced staff and working conditions or a combination thereof each and every time! 1ra7rSn*Mj,n
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This was one of those rare cases where the company loved being manipulated and this person had the process down to a science. z#g1@8MU OYW9B,a%P
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I know what you must be thinking: Frank didn't prep his candidate.
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No, we actually went through this discussion ad nauseum just as Byrne, Bruno, Finkel, and all the great recruiting trainers have taught us to do. I even became sick of hearing myself enforce the "counteroffer pitfalls" to the candidate during her resignation period.
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It turns out the employer in this instance, contrary to the majority of cases that contribute to the statistics, actually raised this person's salary and enhanced her job duties each and every time she resigned!
sunny 2007-2-8 10:30 AM
The candidate had utter control over the company and knew exactly when to manipulate her employer repeatedly to her personal advantage. I was clearly duped and taken advantage of when I discovered I had been exploited to benefit someone's current financial status. (I did get some revenge later in due time, but that's another story.) %a-Wd)NN9P'h1i,q
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[b]Second Story: Should I Have Resigned? [/b]
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Every now and then we come across a client who loves our first candidate so much that they decide to take over the entire finalization of the interview process. These are the guys or gals that feel "they know darn well" how to extend an offer and no longer need us.
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This is not so bad if it's a professional, well-trained, and knowledgeable corporation completing the hiring process. It's also not bad if you're on retainer and it doesn't matter how the second interview/offer is handled, as you get paid regardless.
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It does matter if your license is on the line, you're working in a state with high Errors and Omissions insurance premiums (like New Jersey), and the company is an entrepreneurial firm that needs to be monitored closely so as to protect the candidate from prematurely resigning without having a written official offer in hand.