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Recruiting Passive Candidates with Multiple Offers
by Lou
Adler
On the face of it, this title
makes no sense. First, how could a passive candidate have multiple offers?
Second, who cares? In today’s troubled economic times, when we make an offer,
it’s accepted; no negotiations, no counteroffers, no competing offers.
It’s just accepted. Period.
So I could leave it at that, and
make this officially the shortest article I’ve ever written on ERE in 10 years.
But what’s the point then? Under the low probability chance the market for top
talent is finally starting to heat up a bit, recruiters might soon be faced
again with the challenge of recruiting candidates with multiple offers. And, if
not, they can bookmark this article for that exciting day.
So for recruiters who don’t
remember what it’s like, and for those recruiters who are too young to remember
the golden olden days when top candidate supply was less than demand, a little
history is in order. Whenever the economy is expanding more than a few
percentage points, labor shortages in certain job categories frequently occur.
Under these circumstances, companies aggressively compete for this scarce
talent by bidding up prices (i.e., salaries and signing bonuses) and increasing
the speed of decision-making. In this hyper-heated market, mistakes are made,
recently hired candidates are pursued by ultra-competitive recruiters who are
paid for making placements, and hiring managers are pulling out their hair. For
third-party recruiters this is what’s referred to as “the good old days.”
There are some things recruiters
can do to minimize the bidding wars and increase their chance of landing the
star players.
- Be first. Employ an early-bird sourcing strategy.
Whoever gets the best candidates first has the best chance of closing the
person a week or two later. Everyone else has to play catch-up, with a
significant comp increase used as the primary lure. Of course, as you’ll
discover in a moment, while being first has a huge tactical advantage,
employing a career maximization recruiting strategy is required if you
want to actually hire these people. This will minimize the need for paying
ever-increasing compensation premiums.
- Don’t take no for an answer. Once the market for a
certain job category heats up, the best people in this class get bombarded
with emails and calls from recruiters. In the hustle for face time,
recruiters often stumble over their own feet, hoping to attract the
person’s attention with “the best job ever.” To avoid the used car sales
recruiting approach, good candidates use a number of ploys to dump said
recruiter. These are typically of the form “not interested,” or “not
looking,” or “happy where I am,” or something similar. Don’t believe it,
especially if your job truly represents a positive move for someone. In
this case, you’ll need an attention-getting statement that prevents the
candidate from throwing said recruiter into the dung-heap of clichés. One
of my favorites is to say something like “Are you aware you’ve just made a
major decision with minor information? On the chance the position I’m
handling represents a true career move, wouldn’t it make sense to talk 5
or 10 minutes?” Then go into my favorite recruiting technique of all time,
the “time is your most critical asset, don’t waste it,” technique.
- Convert the conversation from compensation to
careers.
One primary goal of the first call with a passive candidate is to get the
person to think about your job as a career move rather than a compensation
increase. As soon as you sense that money is the topic du jour, describe
the differences between a career maximization vs. a compensation
maximization strategy as the key decision-making process the candidate
needs to consider. The idea behind this is that compensation will grow
faster in the long term if the person maximizes career growth instead of
money in the short term.
- Create an opportunity gap to begin the career
move discussion.
Make sure you use the “candidate talks first” technique to get the person
to provide a quick review of his/her work history. During this phase, look
for gaps in the candidate’s background your job fills in or expands.
Consider factors like team size, scope of the effort, budget impact on the
company, company growth rates, learning opportunities, and the like. When
you describe your job opening, mention these points as representative of
growth opportunities for the candidate. Then ask if the person would be
interested in considering what you have to offer in more depth. Go slow
here. Your goal as a recruiter is to sell the next step, not the end game.
- Formalize the candidate decision-making
process. As
part of the initial conversations, ask the candidate what criteria he/she
will use to determine if the job represents an appropriate career move.
While these factors vary depending on the function and job level, they
typically cover items like technology challenges, company growth, the
scope of the project, learning and career opportunities, the hiring
manager and quality of the team, and compensation, among others. I add any
that are missing or specific to the company, and ask the candidate to
prioritize these in some formal way, usually in an email. The idea behind
this is to make sure the candidate obtains all of this information during
the interviewing process. If the candidate has multiple offers to
consider, I then suggest that all opportunities be evaluated based on the
priorities initially provided.
- Be last. Don’t make an offer until the candidate says
yes. As part of maintaining applicant control and using a “stay the buyer”
approach to recruiting, it’s important to not enter into a bidding war.
Key to this is to test all offers before making them formal. This involves
a sequence of tests throughout the interviewing process. Start by asking the
candidate how interested she/he is in the open opportunity after the first
set of interviews. As the pursuit progresses continue the testing by
asking when the person could start if a fair offer was presented. As you
get closer to the end, ask the person how your position compares to others
the person is considering, using the comparative decision-making process
mentioned above. Finally, ask if the person would accept your offer if
formally presented under the terms negotiated. Only when the person says “100%
yes” should you make the offer. The idea behind this is to negotiate the
offer before it’s formalized, getting agreement in incremental steps.
These recruiting strategies and tactics are useful
whenever you’re recruiting a top person who has multiple offers. This is more
common during periods of economic expansion, but it’s also quite prevalent
whenever labor shortages by certain job classes exist. Under these
supply/demand constraints, the idea is to present your position as the one
offering the best career move, not the one that just offers the biggest comp
increase. Of course, you have to prove it, but that’s the whole point, isn’t
it?
Re-posted with written permission from
the Author Lou Adler
Precision
Recruiting
Web: www.PrecisionRecruiting.ca
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