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How to make recruiters like you


COMMENTS

None of this will make any difference to a recruiter. The only thing that will is being a good candidate and having a good CV. If you don't then if you buy me lunch I still won't call you.  Read all comments »

You may not like recruiters. You may think that they are like estate agents or journalists. You may even accuse them of being parasites. But if you want a new job, it’s counterproductive to antagonize them and productive to get them on your side. Here’s how to do it:

Put yourself in their shoes

All the recruiters we spoke to would like to point out that they make their money by placing candidates. If they don’t place anyone, they won’t get paid. If they think you are a strong candidate they will therefore be nice to you. If they don’t think you’re a strong candidate, don’t blame them for passing you over.

“Don’t take it personally,” says the head of one financial services recruitment boutique. “Remember that we need to be viewed as useful and essential by the client and therefore we can only put forward candidates matching the job description and who are of a higher calibre than the client is able to source directly.”

Spell out what you have to offer

Most recruiters receive hundreds of CVs a week. They don’t have time to read them all in detail. Therefore, if you’re applying for a job use the covering letter to spell out precisely why you’re a good fit.

“I am at the buzz word-driven end of a buzz word-driven industry,” says one recruiter. “You need to make it very obvious that you are suited to the role. For example, just because you’ve worked with credit derivatives, I do now know that you can do copulas.”

Don’t expect them to pay for everything

Recruiters will often suggest a meeting in a coffee shop. You may feel they should pay for anything you consume, but you will endear yourself better if you volunteer to pick up the tab.

“When a candidate offers to pay, it makes me feel that they have got some value from the meeting,” says one recruiter.

Regularly update your CV

This is not so much about getting recruiters to like you as getting their computer systems to like you.

“Most CVs are entered into computer systems and most of these systems operate using a combination of recentness and relevancy,” says a recruiter. “If you make a small change and send it through to us again, it will move to the top of the queue.”

Find someone to refer you

On the whole, recruiters will like you more if you are referred by someone they respect (preferably a client). This does not always hold true, however.

“People who are referred are often a bit needy. You have to ask why they didn’t come through directly,” says a recruiter.

COMMENTS

James Bond, Student,  Tue 16 Jun 09

All headhunters, jobs websites, bodyshoppers, recruitment firms ...should be banned, and their HR people bundled and thrown into the Atlantic never to be found, never to return to civilisation. They waste time, money, energy and other resources of jobseekers. They play with their lives heartlessly. And on top of that, they peddle myths, untruths, presumptions and worse to unsuspecting jobseekers.

Add your comment »

ChildofLordPatrick, Accounting & Finance,  Tue 16 Jun 09

I have tried to use HHs and RCs in rare moments in the past and I have found them all to be entirely useless.  I have never found a role in old-fashioned merchant banking or investment banking through vermin like this. 

A combination of nepotism and good connections seems to have done the trick.

These are third rate people who can't get jobs as estate agents / journalists or MPs.  I have noticed these people seem to spring exclusively from the T & B communities: typically cheap leather shoes, disgustingly tailored suits and no polity whatever.

I have never found a job through these idiots and I'm not about to start now.  Such people shuffle the same crowd from desk to desk and add nothing of value to the real economy.

Add your comment »

HFunder, Hedge Funds,  Tue 16 Jun 09

The real question is how to make me like headhunters, these pathetic dumbasses

Add your comment »

Tom, Accounting & Finance,  Tue 16 Jun 09

References are routinely used to expand the recruiters's network.  Providing them will not help the candidate in any way.

In my experience >80% of advertised roles don't exist by the time the role gets advertised.  They either didn't exist from the start and were just recruiter "prospects", or are back fill cv's for candidates already placed, or are no hope applications for a client who already has an internal candidate.

Add your comment »

Paulgboye, Accounting & Finance,  Tue 16 Jun 09

Most CVs are entered into computer systems and most of these systems operate using a combination of recentness and relevancy

Add your comment »

matmateo,  Tue 16 Jun 09

The point is that if you have no connections you must use others. In this time we need them and they need us. That's the way it is. But sad anyway..

Add your comment »

irritatedhh, HR & Recruitment,  Tue 16 Jun 09

"... it's not often that we gain anything useful from HHs"

What like a new job? Whopper.

Add your comment »

Recruiter1, Accounting & Finance,  Tue 16 Jun 09

Never seen this before its great, bankers calling other people names and talking about adding real value to the economy.

The attitudes on here are priceless, people who never use recruiters or who think job boards should be thrown into the Atlantic(?) who are putting their thoughts across ON A RECRUITMENT JOB BOARD WEBSITE,... you couldn't make it up

And we are the morons??

Love it.

Add your comment »

risky, Derivatives,  Tue 16 Jun 09

Thanks Sarah
I understand even if I do think that its a bit harsh comparing a headhunter to Gordon. They may be parasites but they arent a patch on him.

Add your comment »

Luke, Capital Markets,  Tue 16 Jun 09

how pathetic! do you really want the drink offered by someone who might be unemployed, before securing him/her a job?

Add your comment »
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