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Guest comment: Don’t diss the headhunter

COMMENTS

The most striking aspect of my dealings with headhunters over the years is that so many of them have zero product knowledge. I don't expect great expertise, but how can they sell me to a client when they don't understand my CV or the role they are trying to fill.  Read all comments »

Think about how you’re presenting yourself to headhunters and recruiters before complaining about their lack of response, says Rodolphe Mortreuil of MKMC Ltd.

It's true to say that people sometimes have good reason to be unhappy with the way they are treated by recruitment professionals and failure to respond to emails is one of the big gripes.

However, I would like to show the other side of the coin, through an experience that happened to me over the weekend, when I received the following email:

"Hi,

I understand you are an executive search company but was presumably you are looking for candidates to fit profiles as well.

I have just had a final round with [company One] for an associate client advisor position and have a final round with [company Two] and [company Three] coming up ... I just wanted to see if any of your clients had any current requirements for someone like me who is looking for an associate client advisor level where training is provided etc

Kind Regards

[Name removed]

[Mobile phone number and email address removed]"

That’s it.

It may not be the worst email I have received, but it comes close, and this is why:

1) It is much too informal for a piece of business correspondence. How can I take the sender seriously if he/she opens with "Hi" when we don't know each other? Email is not Instant Messaging. I can only decide how a candidate will perform in front of my client on the basis of his attitude and behaviour with me. You have to be as professional and focused with the headhunter as you would be with the firm you are hoping for a contract from.

2) It is not written in proper English. So either the sender doesn't speak English as a native language (in which case that should be mentioned and explained) or he/she doesn't care. That is a question you certainly do not want anyone reading your CV/cover letter to ask him/herself.

3) There is no information whatever in this email concerning what makes the sender a potential candidate. Skills? Education? Experience? Even if you elect not to make your CV available immediately (which, in my opinion, is the right choice), you should at least tell me why I should work with you.

4) The one piece of information that email actually does give me is why I should not work with the sender. He/she already has one offer and is hoping for one to two more in the near future. Yet he wants me to risk my name and reputation to my clients, getting him even more offers, so he can what? Turn them down? Why would I be willing to do that?

Because I do not like the sometimes bad reputation the recruitment industry has – any more than my colleagues out there do – I did send a polite answer to the email. But I am glad I don't receive this sort of message often. I wouldn’t want to answer too many of them.

Rodolphe Mortreuil is founder and managing director of McKinsey Mortreuil Clarke (MKMC) Ltd.

Note from the editor: Sorry if you were one of the many people who left a comment which didn't immediately materialise on this post - we've been having a few issues with our comments system...

COMMENTS

Richard, HR & Recruitment,  Thu 24 Apr 08

Although I agree in principle, I think it is important to consider other aspects. I would have thought the fact he had an offer on the table would suggest he is a candidate with high value and therefore of interest to both you and potential employers. The fact that he has an offer, but is still looking indicates he is not happy with the current offer, surely a bit of proper recruitment will dig out his real need’s so you are only then putting him forward for jobs he is interested in and would accept and therefore not 'risking' your reputation. Finally, I wouldn’t give a ff what the candidate called me as he has just given me 3 new potential client’s which are hiring.. But that’s just my 2p.

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AN, HR & Recruitment,  Thu 24 Apr 08

I agree the need to be attentive to a candidates skillset, but to dismiss him/her for sending a short email with a quick intro is pure snobbery !
One can only assess when they have met a candidate and part of our job is "find out" their skills and experience

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John, Commodities,  Thu 24 Apr 08

Headhunters are OK. It's the so-called 'recruitment consultants' who I be dissin'!

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Sheldon Paule, HR & Recruitment,  Fri 25 Apr 08

Rodolphe Mortreuil is absolutely spot on. Another common error of candidates is to apply to jobs which they are totally inappropriate for because they lack the minimum skill requirements specified for the role or do not possess the qualfications required for the role. Its very frustrating for a recruiter to have to read through masses of what is almost spam or junk email from inapropriate candidate applications. This is particularly the case these days with internet advertising. Its fairly obvious when this happens the candidate has not read the advert properly and if they have, do not understand plain English. So as  recruiters how do we classify such candidates?

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Anonymous,  Fri 25 Apr 08

Executive search person who cares about their reputation??  My God, few and far between.

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Relieved, Debt / Fixed Income,  Fri 25 Apr 08

Thank god you're not my head hunter

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Taurus, Information Services,  Sun 27 Apr 08

The title says it all.  Recruiters/headhunters usually have incredibly inflated opinions of themselves.  You have to flatter their egos to get them on side.  Some like being called in the first instance (and wont respond to emails), others vice versa.  It's a bit pot luck I'm afraid.  I must admit, whoever wrote the email to Rodolphe (quoted above) is a complete plank!

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Not a Big Headhunter Fan, Private Banking / Wealth Management,  Mon 28 Apr 08

The recruitment industry has a bad rep because it is warranted... A couple years back I tried to enlist the help of this particular headhunter writing the article as I wanted to get into the wealth management field and I have to say he, like the vast majority of headhunters (not just specialised in PB, but in other fields as well), was not a least bit helpful so he should apply some of the critical preaching to his own practice.  At the time I had a couple years of M&A and fixed income sales and trading experience within a major bank, but the feedback via email, with no meeting, was that in order to have the pretention to apply to a wealth management role I needed to gain experience within the wealth management department of my own bank , and that without experience it was quasi-impossible  to have a chance to interview with another wealth management specialist. The issue was that the bank at the time I was working for was not hiring at the time. Needless to say that a couple months later I was working for a major swiss wealth manager as an investment advisor as I had been able to land interviews through my own personal network... no additional comments

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Not a Big Headhunter Fan Either, Investment Banking / M & A,  Mon 28 Apr 08

Here is my two-cent take on headhunters in general... 19 out 20 are absolutely hopeless
- The vast majority can't tell the difference between roles in front office / middle office, or sub-fields within IB vs. Sales, Trading, and Research
- The vast majority tell you they are going to speak to so and so about you, but never bother getting back to you with feedback
- Don't take the career advice/guidance of headhunters too accurately if you work in a bank, you already have access to  first-hand information regarding career-related issues
- Precious few are headhunters with real contacts across the banking industry and know what they are talking about ... and hence driving Maseratis

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A Pedant, Asset Management,  Mon 28 Apr 08

The most striking aspect of my dealings with headhunters over the years is that so many of them have zero product knowledge.  I don't expect great expertise, but how can they sell me to a client when they don't understand my CV or the role they are trying to fill.

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