Employers typically use an executive search firm when a top job opening is important enough, senior enough and when discretion is at a premium. These three factors warrant the investment of bringing in a search firm. And an investment it is. Retaining a recruiting firm will likely cost a minimum of $75,000, but that figure can rise dramatically with the seniority and pay level of the position. Once you start recruiting executives for your C-suite that cost can easily run into the hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Usually, the search firm will charge one third of the position’s compensation package. But everything is negotiable, especially if you’re asking the recruiter to search for multiple professionals simultaneously. If the cost of not filling the role with just the right candidate is significantly higher than the cost of the search, then you might be ready to consider investing in the services of an executive search firm.
U.K.-based executive recruiting franchise, CNA International, set out to discover why and when retaining a headhunting firm is advantageous. The firm often brainstorms with senior executives about ways they can build their senior management teams without incurring the expense of bringing in the firepower of trained executive recruiters. But at the end of the day, while you can get a lot of lift from employee referrals, job postings and of course the big daddy of them all – LinkedIn – there is no service available (at least not yet, though IBM is working on it) to simply download a thoroughly vetted, interested and qualified A-player. Nothing, it seems, is comparable to an executive recruiter.
12 Ways to Recruit Top Performers
Recruiting top performers, according to the best search consultants who ply their trade day in and day out, is an exacting science – it is labor intensive, complex, and requires a rare set of people skills and business expertise. This might be why tens of thousands of recruiters roam the earth – and why most of them are in hot demand today.
Here are a dozen reasons why you need to consider bringing in an executive recruiter for your next important hiring mandate, along with tips from leading recruiters themselves.
1) Good is just not good enough. You require a senior executive candidate who is truly great. If hiring top performing talent is important to your company, a search firm can help you do the rigorous work required to nab game-changing hires. “It is important to look at the impact these professionals can have on a company,” said Craig Buffkin, managing partner of executive search firm Buffkin / Baker. “If it turns out you’ve identified and hired a game-changing leader, your company stands to make significantly increased revenue or profit gains.” He said the real value great recruiters often bring is their ability to assess all of the available talent, and that means looking inside your company for leaders, or those with potential to become great leaders but who might have been somehow overlooked, as well as examining the field of external candidates. For the latest news and updates on Buffkin / Baker, visit their Industry Media Center profile page.
2) The search is incredibly important at the senior executive level. Searches for C-level positions that report into the chief executive officer are just too important not to go out to an executive search firm. Executives within the C-suite often make or break a company. A search firm, said Robert A. Foster, president of recruiting firm Foster & Associates, can help mitigate the risk of hiring for these coveted positions. “During my 15 years at Korn Ferry,” he said, “I developed a Rolodex that was deep and wide. In my own firm over the past eight years, my clients have come to know that I have many contacts who are with leading companies, as well as alums of those organizations, and who won’t be off-limits to me.” As a result, he said, his searches can be completed thoroughly, expeditiously and with a much reduced possibility of an accidental, or bad, hire. For the latest news and updates on Foster & Associates, visit their Industry Media Center profile page.
6) You have to recruit from a target company with which your company has good relationships. If you need to recruit top executive talent from partner companies with which your organization does business, or even from direct rivals which is often the case, the confidentiality that search firms offer helps avoid ruffling feathers. According to leadership advisor Marlin Hawk, one fourth of American businesses have experienced a surge in talent raids, but most companies have done nothing about protecting themselves. In fact, 54 percent are virtually defenseless against corporate poaching, according to a recent study by the firm. All indications are that the problem isn’t going away anytime soon. Some may be skeptical about search firms working to protect client companies against talent raiders when as often as not they are the ones aggressively trying to lure away top talent. And though Mark Oppenheimer, Marlin Hawk’s chief innovation officer, agreed that executive recruitment firms campaigning for talent retention might seem hypocritical, that’s not necessarily the case. “We genuinely want to protect the great hires we make for our clients,” he said. “That’s why we make such a big deal about preparing to onboard candidates and integrating them post-placement. In our role, we talk to a broad range of candidates and gain valuable insights into why people want to stay with their current company or move on. We can’t work miracles, but we can bring our insights to the table and partner with clients in developing strategies to maximize executive talent retention.” Now that’s service. For the latest news and updates on Marlin Hawk, visit their Industry Media Center profile page.
8) You lack internal bench strength and have few successors to your senior executives. If you sense a key executive might be on the verge of leaving or that you could benefit from top-grading, a succession bench might help you tee up executive hires in advance of need. Three quarters of HR leaders in a recent poll identified leadership succession as their primary internal challenge. And it is at the very top of companies where succession planning can, and often does, go lacking. “My advice for every company is to be prepared,” said Russell S. Reynolds Jr., founding chairman of RSR Partners, a leading board and executive search firm based in Greenwich, Conn. Mr. Reynolds said that beyond fiduciary and human resource reasons, it is simply good business sense to “know who your successor is at all times.” Proper corporate governance, he added, warrants that boards and sitting chief executives be “very close on the issue” and have a confidential succession game plan in place at all times. “One has to assume that things can go wrong, and they often do,” he said. “Any good CEO or board chairman worries about this and has a plan.” A good search firm, he added, can of course be a huge help.
11) You have an important executive search that is taking too long. Whenever a search takes too long, it is time to call in the reinforcements to speed time-to-hire for challenging searches and those with compressed timelines. “Our consultants have detailed knowledge and expertise of the discipline and the sector in which they work, and that means we can quickly interpret client requirements to ensure we are completely aligned prior to the search commencing,” said Adam Hillier, marketing and digital practice lead at London-based Wickland Westcott. “We work collaboratively with our clients and agree to a clear plan and associated timelines for every assignment, and that can oftentimes reduce our lead times.” Because he and his colleagues constantly ‘trade’ in the market, they have cultivated an extensive network of exceptional talent. “This enables us to deliver clients a comprehensive and rigorous search, at speed, resulting in best-in-class service.” One more reason why going outside to experts who know their craft so well works almost every time.
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