When reading the thoughts of my peers in the recruiting profession, I have to admit I become a little surprised at how many have really had a chance to hire people. While aside from a couple of assistants in recruiting groups I have managed, I actually have never hired anyone. Usually that has been the hiring manager's job.
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Recruiters play a vital role in the process that includes:
2 ^: [+ q- K q7 ~! v! s* J# U- Attracting applicants: advertising, networking, job fairs.
- Creating candidates: processing and screening applicants.
- Monitoring or managing the interview process: directly or by way of HR.
- Processing offers: directly or by way of HR.
- Performing background and reference checks: directly or through third-party.
- Third-party vendor management: agencies, job boards, software.
- Help planning the holiday party: just kidding.
But none of the above starts until a hiring manager says, "I need to hire somebody." Then sometime in the future and a couple of interviews later, the hiring manager comes back to the office and says, "This is the one I want to hire."
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Now, this may seem just a little nitpicking, but whenever the discussion turns to measuring performance or process metrics, the phrase always pops up, "Determine performance by time of hire and quality of hire."
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Neither is in direct control of the recruiter. Creating a methodology of performance measurement in this environment that includes time to hire and quality of hire is the equivalent of taking your driver's test from the back seat of the car.
2 ?$ J, U4 S% Z' A; gAs my old pappy used to say, "If you ain't holding the wheel, you ain't driving the car."
" V+ `( [1 r( O5 J(Actually, Dad was from South Boston and would have burned holes in me with his stare if I ever called him "pappy", but when spinning cornbread, pappy seems more appropriate than dad.)
`! g- S3 V" p5 {7 yNow, a good recruiter can enhance a process and make it more efficient through their overall industry knowledge and relationship-building with their hiring managers.
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However, consider the following:
8 |4 H0 s# b" ^6 q4 p- Can a recruiter overcome an inefficient hiring manager? (Hmmmm…maybe this one…no, no…maybe this one…hmmm…no, no…)
- Can a recruiter overcome a bad company reputation? (FOX News Headline, "XYZ Corp. shipped another 2,000 jobs overseas…film at eleven.")
- Can a recruiter overcome a bad process neither designed nor controlled by them? (…only after the fourth interview, but before the seventh, unless of course this is an accelerated process requiring a signoff from both the resident and department monitor…)
- Can a recruiter require quality and process adherence upward? ("Look here, boss, the policy manual you just threw in the wastebasket clearly states…")
- Can a recruiter force hiring managers to have a fair and balanced candidate evaluation process? ("I know this one looks good on paper…but my gut tells me…" Good Lord! It's his gut again!)
- Can a recruiter control third-party vendor relationships with hiring managers? (David, sending you a resume, look it over and call me. By the way, we haven't played a round of golf in ages…call me.)