“Over There Thursday” – The Savage Truth

by Michael VanDervort on September 17, 2009 · 0 comments

New Feature on Human Race Horses

Greg Savage - The Savage Truth

Greg Savage - The Savage Truth

Today marks the launch of a new feature series on the Human Race Horses blog.   I am calling it “Over There Thursday”.  The idea is to bring across and present some  different perspectives on HR, Recruiting, careers, and business  from outside the US on my US – centric  blog.

I want to thank Bill Boorman for his help in getting this idea off the ground.

He introduced me to our first guest blogger, Greg Savage from The Savage Truth.  Greg is the International CEO, Europe and Asia Pacific for Aquent,  the only global staffing company dedicated to marketing and design.  Greg is currently based in Australia, and you can find him on Twitter and LinkedIn.

About The Savage Truth

Written by Greg Savage, The Savage Truth is a resource of insights and ideas for anyone interested in recruitment and staffing. Though his views are often controversial and contrarian, Greg Savage is a sought-after speaker and presenter and is regularly asked to comment on the industry, its challenges and its future.

And here is The Savage Truth about recruiting in Australia, brought to us courtesy of Greg Savage.

Thanks for being the keynote contributor, Greg!

Are you transactional or are you consultative?

The Australian recruitment and staffing industry has followed the rest of the world into steep decline.  Small glimpses of a recovery may be be coming into view, but times remain tight and recruiters have to scrap for every client, every order. One thing the recession has done, is highlight the paucity of true consulting skills across our profession. Years of talent shortages and desperate clients have allowed ‘résumé shufflers’ to succeed, even thrive, and the ability to actually connect with clients, service them as “trusted advisors” has been lost in many cases.

But as the saying goes, ‘ on a rising tide, everybody floats. When the tide goes out you can see who has been swimming naked”. So I think its time for every recruiter, Australian or otherwise, to must ask themselves a question. And you have to be totally honest when you answer.

Are you transactional or are you consultative?

In other words do you provide resumes or do you provide expertise? Because your survival depends on your ability to provide something your clients currently lack. And with hundreds of competitors referring candidates indiscriminately, cheap job boards, and the emergence of social media as a talent source –resumes is one thing your clients do not lack.

If you are not sure whether you do provide additional value or expertise to your clients, try this hypothetical exercise. Say you picked up the phone to your client today and said “Bob I no longer actually provide candidates. I want you to remain my client on the basis of the other aspects of value you get from dealing with me”.

What response do you predict?

Now this is a powerful exercise because it makes you face up to whether your clients do in fact value the consultative aspect of your offering. This is in fact the real stuff behind that well worn cliché ‘value add’

Does your client value your counsel in hiring trends, interview techniques and candidate specific questions for upcoming interviews?

You must differentiate your offer through your fresh approach to this business. Becoming a subject matter expert is what your clients (and talent) will be expecting of you going forward

Sure, its true, clients want us to deliver quality candidates, and that’s what they pay for. But they want it bundled up in “trusted advisor” wrapping paper

So you have to be the recruiter who can advise on such issues as

  • Skill set availability – what skills are hot in the market and who has them
  • Industry demand – which sectors are competing for the best talent
  • Project “sex appeal” – what do the best talent like to work on
  • Required turn round times –how quickly can we access key hires
  • Salaries and benefits and trends in reward and compensation
  • Retention and staff development strategies
  • Corporate perceptions – of your client. In other words what can your client do to be a more attractive employer
  • Hiring and retention ratios. What is staff turnovers like in their industry
  • New techniques and tactics emerging – what are their competitors doing to attract staff? To retain people? To reward staff?

It’s going to be a new world for recruiters in Australia as the market recovers. I believe that the role of the skilled recruiter who is trusted to provide knowledge, advice and guidance will become MORE valued by employers – not less valued.

But to get to that stage we need to be sophisticated in our selling, consultative in our approach and very clearly be able to point to how we add value through the process.


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