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Yes Twitter and Face Book are cool…but recruiters, get real!

This year, in my capacity of International CEO of Aquent, (the only global staffing company dedicated to marketing and design) I was very excited to help launch our new website, which specifically promotes the ability of our talent and clients to connect with our Agents, via social networks, if preferred.

(Note. The permanent and Search division of Aquent has been re branded Firebrand Talent Search)

You might think then, that I am a social networking evangalist, a true believer that is convinced “old recruiting” is dead and a new world of connecting via web-enabled networks awaits. A world where recruiters will manage armies of “friends and contacts” and slot them neatly into web-generated clients, themselves sourced via a gigantic pool of “Linked-In” connections.

Well, you would be wrong on both counts. No, I am not a social networking fanatic, and nor do I believe a new recruiting world will unfold, based on social networking per se.

Don’t get me wrong, I am fully aware of the potential power of social media. I have my “Linked-In” page, and I find it fantastic for information and idea sharing and locating lost colleagues and also accessing talent. I am “Face-booked ” up to the max, although in truth its primarily a way to see what my daughter is up to, and share photos with my sisters overseas. And I fully “get” how Twitter, and the rest, are going to revolutionise how we communicate with people on a broad scale. We are in a dynamic, fast-changing world, and technology is impacting many aspects of human interaction — no doubt.

But remember this! Faxes were going to revolutionise recruitment. Remember? The Internet was going to wipe traditional recruiters from the landscape. Have we forgotten already? Email was going to mean the end of consultative recruiters. Web-testing and screening would mean selling skills and closing skills and candidate management skills were going to be redundant for poor old recruiters like me, living in yesteryear.

And none of it came true. None of it.

Sure we are in a recession now and recruitment as an industry is suffering, but that’s pure economic cycles. The truth is that for the five years up to 2008, the staffing industry was growing like it never had before. Record revenues, record profits, record take-up of our services by both clients and candidates, right across the world.

The Internet and email and job boards didn’t kill off recruiters! New technologies helped them to new heights and new riches! And the truth is that the recruiters who are doing the best now are those who are able to integrate the traditionally required skills with new technologies, and make one plus one equal three.

As I commented in our press release announcing our new website “’Job boards don’t find people jobs. People finds people jobs!”

(See the full release here )

Just before the market tanked about 18 months ago, an exiting employee of my firm, commented “Aquent is great place and Greg a good enough guy, just too old-fashioned”. Apparently most of that opinion was based on my refusal to pander to spoilt Generation Y’ers in our business who wanted everything, gave little in return, and had tantrums along the way to boot. The departing employee who made that remark was going to a new staffing world of in-house café lattes, flexible work hours, torn-jeans dress code — and a talent management strategy based entirely on scanning Facebook all day.

Sadly that business is gone, along with many of its ilk. And of course it’s the “old fashioned” recruiters, people who actually look to connect, personally, with talent and clients, recruiters who consult and add value, staffing professionals who can read between the lines, influence, persuade and truly match beyond a bland job description — who will survive this downturn and thrive in the inevitable upswing.

Social networking is a communications channel recruiters must embrace. No question. But lets be smart about this. It’s NOT the Holy Grail. It’s just a tool. An enabler, and it needs to be harnessed like all the other mechanisms we use to manage our relationships with clients and candidates.

Social networking devotees talk lovingly of “friends” and “contacts,” when in most cases, they are nothing of the sort. Who are we fooling when we call someone we have never met (quite possibly never heard of), “a friend”. Clicking “I accept” does not buy you love baby! How strong are your “friendships” when your “friend” can rid themselves of you by clicking a mouse (and hey, you don’t even get notified your “friendship” has bitten the dust). And your “contacts and connections” on Linked-In can be kept real if you are vigilant and disciplined, and there is huge value there. But accept everyone who wants to connect to you, and you build someone else’s mailing list, little more.

Every day web-advertising spruikers spout scare tactics suggesting recruitment companies who don’t pour money into social networking recruiting will be left behind, and be unable to attract talent. Total nonsense of course.

The real value of social media for the recruitment industry is building communities of like-minded people. Communities where you can showcase your credibility and build up networks that will allow you to source in the future. In fact I think the real value of social media is as an “influencer’,’more than a way to tap into talent . Those recruiters who use social media as a de facto job board, listing endless links to job descriptions juts don’t get the main game at play

Eventually a more structured and fruitful way to mine networking sites will be developed, and then it will behoove recruiters to get serious. But by then the social networking phenomena itself would have evolved into something different!

In the meantime, posting a job vacancy via a Tweet is even less targeted than the least targeted job board. You may get a valid response, you may not. But the fact remains, the real work of a skilled recruiter happens once the talent has applied, not before.

Social networking “gurus” and evangelists pontificate about how its web 2.0 that will make or break the next generation of recruiters, when in most cases these experts have never placed a person in a job and would have zero idea of the dynamic that has to occur for placements to be consistently made.

And that’s what we are talking about here, fellow recruiters. Don’t be seduced by the bright lights! Don’t be hooked into the promise of untold riches based on browsing your Facebook page. Sure, use Twitter, but don’t be a Twit. Play around with Facebook but face up to the reality that the hard work of building an offline reputation and real-world skills is still required. Link-In for all you are worth, but don’t allow the missing link of people interactions skills to be your downfall.

Of course, candidates and even clients, will originate from your social networking activities. I have had success that way myself. And that’s cool and its very welcome. But I also pick up candidates and clients from amongst the parents on the sidelines of my sons rugby matches! No one is really suggesting that as a targeted, sustainable way to re-invent recruiting are they?

Here is the nuts of it. The hard work of developing a sustainable relationship, building trust, proving you can add value, must be done in the “old fashioned” way. The way that has kept me in the staffing industry for thirty years, making money and having fun during every single one of them!

So as Aquent enters a brave new world of a totally transparent website which connects our customers to our people, note that social networking is intrinsic to our plan, but note too that the real theme behind our website is kinda “old fashioned”.

Connecting people and building real relationships.

Because its people who find people jobs.

  • Posted by Greg Savage
  • On December 7, 2009
  • 12 Comments
Tags: Client management, Online brand, Recruitment Consulting Skills, Relationship building, Selling recruiter value

12 Comments

David Graziano
  • Dec 7 2009
  • Reply
Greg this is an excellent treatise on where on professiona is headed! Brilliant insight and i agree 100%.
Justin Hillier
  • Dec 7 2009
  • Reply
Great article Greg. I must say that as someone who works in the Social media space talking to companies about Social Media tools and application I find it frustrating when Social Media is completely dismissed. The reason this is frustratating is that they are afraid that social media is going to take away what it is that they do and run them out of a job. This simply isn't true. What it will allow them to do, is connect, and position themselves in a more defined and in-depth position, to attract and engage with the candidates that they are seeking. In fact the right strategy and the candidates will find you, not the other way around. The perception of recruiters as just sales people, unapproachable and far from experts, can be diminished by utiising SM tools to inform the market that they are the "first port of call" for your desired market vertical. By engaging and interacting with people they start to get more of a human feel. As you said, people hire people, so why don't consultants use the "tools" that are available to them to make their job overall easier.
Karla Porter
  • Dec 7 2009
  • Reply
It is indeed the "virtual handshake", another bow in one's quiver of communication tools, available to make one's job easier... not the silver bullet.
Tatiana Webber
  • Dec 7 2009
  • Reply
What this company seems to be missing is that social media IS the space that most of his job-market is utilizing. In failing to make the MOST of applications like Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, etc. as tools to connect with talent, (rather than just casually perusing them), this company is clearly missing a major part of its potential market.
Amos Tayts - ResumeTarget
  • Dec 7 2009
  • Reply
What a great and refreshing read - Greg I think you need to expand on the "making money and having fun" part so people can understand the value of building relationships based on previous successful track records.
Greg Savage
  • Dec 7 2009
  • Reply
THis comment from Gareth Jones was posted to a duplicate post on this site Gareth Jones says Hi Greg, another thought provoking post. I agree with your thoughts about the ignorance attributed to the virtues of social media by many recruiters. However, I would also make a couple of comments. Firstly, whilst it is true that in the 5 years up to 2008 our services were used more than ever, it is also important to remember that they were used proportionally less. Our efforts have continually been marginalised, over the last 10 years, by RPO’s, clients own efforts and, as you have pointed out in previous posts, by the spreading of job orders across a larger and larger pool of recruiters on a competitive basis. This trend was largely ignored, particularly by the larger recruiters and you only have to look at their comments as the recession began to see proof of their spectacular ignorance. Many of these companies are publicly listed, with responsibilities to shareholders and really should have known better. Secondly, social media is more than just a channel. Sure, its no panacea and its so new, particularly in recruitment terms, that to make any claims about its impact at the moment are pure speculation. Also, if you cant hold a conversation or build a relationship over the phone or face to face currently, you stand no chance over social media. In fact, its more likely to do you more damage. However what social media does do is create a sense of connectedness that that nothing else has done before it and its not appropriate to compare it to the impact of job boards. Our industry is in desperate need of innovation – a conversation with any client will tell you that. Unfortunately, innovation requires disciplined, objective and realistic thought which is sadly lacking in our industry. Most people in it are polarised in attitude, either in the camp that is announcing the immanent death of the recruitment industry or at the opposite end of the spectrum saying its going to return to the good old days inside 6 months. Neither are right and we need more recruitment leaders in the middle of the spectrum to make any headway in responding to the challenges facing the industry. 10 years ago many people, including recruiters said that IT people were the only people who would ever use the internet to find a job! Great post Greg, look forward to more debate!
Greg Savage
  • Dec 7 2009
  • Reply
This comment from Gareth Jones was posted to a duplicate post. Gareth Jones says Sorry, me again. Just to pick up on what Michael’s comment as i missed it while typing out mine! On the subject of ROI, i can count on – probably less than – one hand, the amount of recruiters who have been bothered to prove an ROI on job boards. Just talk to the job boards themselves and they will tell you few, if any, recruiters ever talk or produce hard numbers in relation to the return on job board spend. Most job boards talk about applications and most recuiters only measure this too. I recently asked my new friend at Monster and he confirmed he had not heard of one recruiter who had produced placement data. We have done this. it took some time, but we did it because we were not happy with spending the money on the basis of applications. We wanted to measure applicant relevancy, those that made it to interview and ultimately placements. Im not saying that we should not be concerned with the ROI of social media, of course we should. But its a bit rich for everyone to be banging on about it when they dont even measure existing channels beyond pure applicant numbers. Ill go now
Dave Martin
  • Dec 7 2009
  • Reply
Great article. As with all new communication methods our nature of excitement extrapolates the end result to the extreme. This typical three E approach creates media hype and fuels the excitement while communicates the extreme. This is always the same! Great example with Fax, the same was with Radio vs TV, or Radio vs Newspaper, or TV vs Newspaper. The fact the Internet is knocking the final nails into Newspapers (perhaps) only give the media more pleasure in highlighting the extreme. As with all media in days gone by (including the www and your website) a recruiter should make the most of the opportunity. But the "sell" should not be to replace sensible business practices.
Alan Whitford
  • Dec 7 2009
  • Reply
Hi Greg As always, a tremendously thoughtful post. An interesting corollary from Chris Thorpe of the Guardian this week, speaking at a Social Media MashUp event in London was this: "It is not social media, it is just social." What did he mean? SM is not a media, it is a means of communicating with a wide range of people with a wide range of methods - in essence extending the reach of your contacts via web based tools, engendering two way and group discussions on common topics. Recruiters who believe that this approach will replace traditional sourcing methods (and how ironic is it that we now automatically include job boards as a traditional media?) instead of including SM in a blended sourcing mix will miss out on a huge proportion of the population who are not yet on Facebook, LinkedIn or Twitter. After all, even FB only has 40-50% of the internet population as members in the major countries (their own data). At the same time, recruiters who ignore the power of instant communication that some of these tools bring, will also miss out on a large proportion of candidates who are from the world of 'immediate' communication. The good news? There is a lot of buzz about SM, recruiters are talking to each other and debating what should be better recruiting practices and methods, and we are finally starting to see more conversations about the important person in all of this: The Candidate. We will put the links and a precis of this post up on RCEuro.com, to spread the word. best regards Alaj
Tracey Dunn
  • Dec 7 2009
  • Reply
Great post Greg And totally agree with Gareth about ROI - I have spent at least fifteen years trying to get across to recruiters that ad spend needs to be compared to revenue earned - not numbers of applicants - it shouldnt be rocket science!!!!
Mervyn Dinnen
  • Dec 7 2009
  • Reply
Transparency is one of the keys Greg, as you say towards the end..you trust your recruiters which is why you are happy for them to have no characterless job lists or e-mail anonymity to hide behind. They are there, inviting candidates to contact them through any means they want. I think that it is a bold and confident recruiter that will rise to this challenge...certainly I am happy for anybody, client or candidate, current past or potential, to read my twitter feed and my blog, I see these as just 2 more ways to communicate with my community, to show them something of me. Ultimately though, the community will only remain strong and develop though personal interaction. The industry did grow in the 5 years before the downturn, as businesses in general were on a hiring frenzy to sustain growth. Unfortunately, I think our industry was also too busy banking the cheques to think about how sustainable it's growth was, and how robust it's business models were.
Rod Smyth - Arithon Recruitment Software
  • Dec 1 2010
  • Reply
Really well said Greg. I have to fully agree, that while social media is a really powerful emerging recruitment tool (as email was 13 years ago), it is just a tool to help good recruiters communicate and share. At Arithon we are very dubious of social media "evangelists" (who in my opinion for the large part are like motivational speakers - good at talking about recruitment but not very good at it). We do however recognise the power that social media brings to a recruiters desktop and thats why we integrate with those very tools. Being in a position to capture the imagination of a recruiter is all very good, but being able to support a good recruiter building relationships is a great achievement. By the way, I love your new website

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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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