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Recruiters, don’t despair, recessions end!

Until about 6 months ago, I had the best recruitment job in the world !

Seriously. CEO of a global, yet niche recruiter, with 450 staff spread across 30 offices in 15 countries. We dominate our space in most markets, we are highly profitable, and we do cool things all the time (see Aquent.com)

But that was then. For the last six months I have had one of the hardest, least rewarding jobs in recruitment (well that’s a hotly contested title I know, but it seems that way to me)!. Like everyone else in staffing, we have seen revenues decline, clients go bust and demand evaporate. From planning growth, opening offices and celebrating record quarters, I have moved on to restructuring, re-thinking, retrenching and re-strategising. And while that’s been healthy and we have done it well, its been very, very painful too

Its been tough. For all of us. But, I have been down this particular road before. Several times. So let me tell you a true story

It starts in August 1987. With 9 intrepid colleagues, I had just started a new recruiting business, which was to be called Recruitment Solutions. We were ambitious. We opened with 10 people on day one. We had two offices and big dreams.

Eight weeks after we opened our doors, the worlds’ stock markets went into free fall. “Black Monday,” the 19th October 1987, made the recent economic turmoil look like a mere blip. The Dow Jones on Wall Street dropped 23% in eight hours, and the next day the Australia All Ordinaries fell an astonishing 46%. That’s right — half the value of listed companies in Australia vanished in one day.

I was terrified. Mortgaged to the hilt, I had borrowed every single dollar to start the business. I had encouraged 10 colleagues to leave great jobs, follow me, and start Recruitment Solutions. And now, I was sure, the economy would tank and our business would fail, ruining us all.

But it did not. Stock markets recovered. The real economy thrived. Our business boomed, and by 1990, only three years later, Recruitment Solutions had 75 staff, five offices and revenues of $13 million. All good.

But it was NOT all good. By mid 1991, the Australian economy had fallen into deep recession. Let me tell you how it felt being a recruiter at that time. In mid 1990, before the recession hit, our business was handling, on average, at any one time, about 250 active perm job orders. By mid 1991, that number had dropped to 18 active jobs.

Our Sydney temp desk, which had averaged 30 job orders a week, plumbed new depths. In one memorable week we took one order. And it came in at 4 p.m. on the Friday – and it was for a one-day assignment!

Our staff numbers dropped from 75 to about 30. We closed two of our five offices. Every person in the company had to take a 10% salary drop. Admin staff were eradicated altogether, with consultants shouldering the load. We stopped advertising totally because great candidates were literally queuing up in the foyer. Rented pot-plans were wheeled out the door.

Our revenues, which peaked at $13 million in 1990, fell to $9 million in 1991.

Oh it was a full-on horror story, believe me. But it had a happy ending.

When the market recovered, we found that many of our competitors had disappeared! We found our clients valued that we had persisted, and felt bound to us as “fellow — survivors”. We found the consultants who remained had been burnished by the fire of true battle and were tougher, more loyal and far more skilled.

We found candidates valued our counsel during tough times, and allied themselves to us both as job-seekers and as clients as they secured senior roles. We saw that our processes and systems had been refined and improved and waste had been totally eliminated. We found that the economy raced back, and skills shortages emerged quickly, catching everyone by surprise. And we were perfectly positioned to grow faster and with more substance than ever before

Subsequently, Recruitment Solutions boomed. In two years our revenues were up to $18 Million. By 1997 sales were over $40 million, we had 8 offices across Australia, and the business was so profitable we could list our company on the Australian Stock Exchange, at a value of over $60 million dollars

Individual recruiters, who had survived the downturn, were streets ahead of new comers, in terms of skills, resilience and relationships. Many of those people with us during the early 90s went on to be huge billers, and I can name a dozen or more who now own their own businesses.

So yes, right now, its tough. But hold firm. Recessions end!

And then…let the good times roll!

  • Posted by Greg Savage
  • On June 5, 2009
  • 13 Comments
Tags: Recession

13 Comments

Ross Clennett
  • Jun 10 2009
  • Reply
Being one of the recruiters who joined Greg in 1991I can endorse how tough it was. There is not a word of exaggeration in what Greg says. Two of the most important things I took (from a desk-level leadership perspective) from going through that 1991/92 recession were; 1) keep the conversations in the team positive - always focus on what you can control (eg outbound calls), rather than things you cannot control (eg the economy) 2) build greater skills in your recruiters - in a tougher market you need a much higher level of skill to generate the same (pre-recession) billings. Recruiters who get better through trail and error only ( a very slow and inefficient way to improve), rather than consistent training & coaching, rarely last long enough to see the good times roll again. A more highly skilled recruiter then does far better than their peers when the market improves (which is exactly what happened to me and other 'recession recruiters' at Recruitment Solutions) When a recession ends most recruiters realise they didn't do enough to prepare themselves to take full advantage of the next boom.
Michelle Novotny
  • Jun 10 2009
  • Reply
Started Discovering People 14 years ago and have never experienced such a down turn. Thanks for sharing such a great story, it will help me to remain focused and determined to hang in there.
Lindsey Morgan
  • Jun 10 2009
  • Reply
I agree wholeheartedly with Greg's sentiments. I have been in recruitment for 24 years in London and Sydney and this down turn is the 4th that I have experienced. I see downturns as a cleansing exercise in our industry whereby the poor to middling get a real wake up call and the best amongst us continue to retain their job, their value and self-respect. Sydney was long overdue for a cleanup of the recruitment industry so this downturn is welcome. Though I hope it does not last for too long!!!
Stephen Wright
  • Jun 10 2009
  • Reply
Hi Greg, I receive your first blog on a gloomy London morning with the city enjoying yet another tube strike, in typical WSR form we are all in the office super early to enjoy a rather 'over the top breakfast' and take advantage of the fact that many of our competition are standing around on train platforms, generally upset that they are doing the same thing they did yesterday but with a wholly different result. I feel much of our industry has had the same reaction to our current challenges!!! To date I have had little ammunition to use when putting forward my sometimes unshared positive outlook on the opportunities that are available to businesses who do the tough yards in the current market. Very happy to receive some positive words. I know my business is now leaner, more focussed and with clearer objectives than anytime since it's conception in 2001
Clare Fletcher
  • Jun 10 2009
  • Reply
Tough times never last. Tough people do.
Elizabeth Varely
  • Jun 10 2009
  • Reply
Good morning Greg, Thank you for you blog. I read your story with fond memories of those, as I call them “halcyon days” of recruitment. You know the ones - when clients returned your calls, candidates turned up for interviews, accepted the job offer and then stayed longer that the guarantee period. Oh bliss! I wonder if I have some contribution to our industry’s woes?. Spooky coincidences or not; 1987 - I was in the USA, 1991 - I was in South Africa, 2001 - I was in Portugal, 2008 - I was in Italy. Do you get my drift? Maybe the solution to all our troubles would be if I surrender my passport and stayed home and minded my own business. Thanks for the words of encouragement. Cheers, Liz
Lesley Horsburgh
  • Jun 11 2009
  • Reply
It's been a week so far tinged with glimmers of positivity and this Mr Savage, tops it off! Working on a trade publication that thrives (or not) from advertising revenue means we cannot dodge a downturn and believe me, your pain is certainly ours! But if there is one thing I have learnt in the last 12 years it' s how negativity breeds negative results, none less so than that fueled by the media. Attitude counts for everything in business and trusting, as Greg says, that there is an upturn on the horizon can help to focus on the future. Don't get me wrong, I don't for a second gloss over the reality that has hit us all firmly between the eyes in recent times, but the only way now really is up! The question is who's ready?
Erica Westbury
  • Jun 11 2009
  • Reply
Great to hear your optimism. I look around my team (albiet a smaller team) and see outstanding performers now. The downside of course, to the "Golden Age of Recruitment" means agencies (yes mine too) had to quickly put on job fillers and call them Recruitment Consultants. That's all gone now thank goodness and a lot of our competitors are gone. Those that will survive now will be far better quality and the reputation of our industry will come out better for it.
Francesca Arcuri
  • Jun 12 2009
  • Reply
Oh what sweet memories, yes sweet because from all that worry and stress came success. Your continued persistence with us at Recruitment Solutions and talking up the situation (with the occasional warning that we could end up at home watching daytime TV) worked! We were encouraged to persist. One thing I distinctly remember is that for a long time we had dozens and dozens of fantastic candidates on our database and suddenly, just as the end of the recession was almost in sight and the job orders had started to increase, confident that we could fill every single order, there was a severe candidate shortage! Go figure! Keep up the personal contact, it beats the electronic gizmos all the time. Cheers.
KattyBlackyard
  • Jun 16 2009
  • Reply
The article is usefull for me. I’ll be coming back to your blog.
Craig Michilis
  • Jun 16 2009
  • Reply
Encouraging words and at the right time. I love the blog and will be back.
CrisBetewsky
  • Jul 7 2009
  • Reply
It's a pity that people don't realize the importance of this information. Thanks for posing it.
Gaynor Lowndes
  • Jul 21 2009
  • Reply
Thanks Greg for this article. Luckily I missed the 1987 crash as I was still at uni but as you know I felt the full force of it in the UK during 90-92. I joined Recruitment Solutions in 1993 and one of the most important things I learned from you was that persistence pays. Never, ever give up. You took a good solid recruiter and made me a great recruiter and I thank you for that.

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Greg is the founder of leading recruitment companies Firebrand Talent Search, People2People and Recruitment Solutions, and a current shareholder and director of several others, including Consult Recruitment. He is a regular keynote speaker worldwide and provides specialised advice for Recruitment, Professional Services & Social Media companies.





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