5 Mistakes Candidates Make When Speaking With Recruiters

August 21, 2018 -

With insight into the process, you can leverage your skills and set yourself aside from the competition that is still shooting blindfolded.

Like any journey, you can’t get anywhere without knowing point A, where you are, and point B, where you want to be.

And then having the strategy to get from A to B.

Let’s start with the basics…

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1. You don’t know who you’re speaking to.

Though they share the same end goal, not all recruiters are the same.

Recruiters have different roles and motivations that impact their interactions with candidates.

There is power in knowing whether the professional you are speaking with is just trying to hit their weekly metrics, or is truly invested in finding their team’s next best fit.

An agency recruiter’s goal, at the end of the month, is to get their candidates the offers.

At the end of the week, though, there are numbers we have to hit in order to keep our jobs.

This breeds two types of recruiters when searching for that ideal needle in the haystack — the type that burns down the haystack and sifts through the ash, and the type that becomes the magnet that attracts the talent.

This becomes very apparent in the recruiter’s day-to-day interactions with their candidates.

They aren’t full-time career consultants — they are driven to match clients with candidates and find the right fit.

The solution?

Be professional, but be yourself.

Ask about the individual’s company and role in order to know if you’re speaking with someone internal or external, and ask about their partnership and knowledge of the client in question.

You will very quickly be able to assess their genuineness and honesty, and whether you want them to be your representative in the first place.

2. You don’t know your A to B.

In other words, you aren’t clear about where you’re at now and you’re even less clear about where you want to be.

A recruiter’s job is not to create your entire career strategy for you.

It’s your job to be able to sell yourself with specific highlights.

Have solid answers to these basic questions: “Tell me about your experience” and “What are you looking for?”

Take the time to understand the needs of the industry, and learn to sell yourself. When you have a wide array of skills, only a portion of them will be utilized in any one role.

When each role has its own top requirements for a qualified candidate, your profile will have to be uniquely aligned to highlight the essential parts.

Pretty straightforward.

Why highlight what the manager is not looking for, or dilute the spotlight, by adding 57 other things you are proud of but the manager does not need and does not care about (i.e publications)?

Also note that social media is becoming an increasingly more prevalent hiring tool.

Eye-tracking technology used by The Ladders revealed that recruiters spend an average of 19% of their time on your LinkedIn profile simply viewing your picture.

Anticipate that someone in the hiring chain will ‘stumble’ upon your social media accounts and make sure when they do, you control what they find and make sure it’s appropriate.

Then there’s the tricky question of pay negotiation.

Take the time to learn how your skills qualify for the industry, noting variation in market rates, so you know how competitively you line up.

If a recruiter asks what you’re looking for, don’t tell them how well you know the market rate, tell them what you’re looking for.

The experience and environment of your next opportunity should be your top priority, not the fact that you cannot afford your cost of living.

3. You’re one of the extremes.

Industry interviews are exhausting for everyone.

Every conversation with recruiters and managers is an evaluation.

Additionally, agency recruiters are sometimes the only ones that have access to roles which could be your entry into the industry or your dream job.

Let that sink in.

Recruiters get three extremes: overly-professional, over-appeasing, or irritable job applicants.

Overly-professional is by far the most common.

And often too stoic.

You need to show them your personality. (Or work on your personality until it’s something you’re proud to show.)

Genuineness is the trump in this card game.

An extremely professional candidate limits the manager’s ability to assess cultural fit with their team, which weighs heavily on their decision to hire.

If it’s not a fit and you take the job anyway, you’ll be searching to escape that environment within a month.

Over-appeasing is the most frustrating to recruiters.

They know exactly what to say to make recruiters excited to represent them, but when called with a phone interview request they will respond, “Oh, I’m actually not interested”.

Be sincere, and be diligent.

If you’re interested in a role, pursue it like it’s the last job on Earth.

If you have hesitations, voice them early on in order to initiate the conversation well before you get an ill-fitted offer or waste anyone’s time.

Irritable candidates just think all recruiters suck.

Because they have a terrible reputation.

But that cynicism can spill over onto well-meaning recruiters that actually want to help you get the job you deserve, outside of their commission or metrics, and ruin your chances completely.

Don’t forget that recruiters, whether you like them or not, are sometimes the only way to an opportunity.

They are masters in staffing and you need them.

Treat every conversation with value and build the partnership and working relationship to get the best outcome.

4. You’re not transparent.

Wouldn’t it be nice to have a recruiter who follows up with you and lets you know every step of the back-end process the moment it happens?

Recruiters wish the same from their candidates.

The more diligent you are in asking for follow-ups (within reason) the more likely you are to get some insight.

What you put in, you get out.

It’s also important to let them know if you are interviewing for other opportunities

They don’t care that you’re working with other recruiters — in fact, they know you are.

The job market is HOT and as much as you feel like there is infinite competition over jobs, they feel like there is infinite competition over candidates!

There is strategic benefit in this.

If you’re pursuing two roles and your #1 choice just invited you for a phone interview, but your backup just gave you an offer with limited time to respond — what do you do?

Rather than dodging both or playing games to buy time, keep your recruiter in the loop.

They can speed up the process on the slower opportunity so that you may get two offers in the same week with a weekend to consider each before making a decision that’s right for you.

This takes a great deal of stress off of you and your recruiters by staying transparent about where you’re at and staying on the same page to all work together.

5. You’re unavailable.

Timing is a major component of the hiring process, so make it work for you, not against you.

Some of my clients require submissions the day the role comes out.

If you are as serious about your job-hunting as you should be, keep an eye on your phone in order to respond within a half-business day.

Recruiters would rather work with you than have you miss the opportunity of a lifetime because of timing.

Similarly, a candidate that will do anything to make themselves available will be seen as more diligent and determined than one that requests to reschedule.

Have blocks of time available or easily made available so that when you get a call you’re the first one up and making an impression as prioritizing this process.

Managers will extend offers to the first available qualified candidate, without bothering to pursue another that was more difficult to get a hold of.

You have to make this easy on the recruiter and the hiring manager.

If you want the job you’ll be responsive and available.

Make this a priority and make the timing work for you.

Both job ‘hunting’ and job ‘landing’ have core fundamentals that set the right candidates apart. When hunting, know your tranferable skills, and take yourself through the exercise of bridging the gap between what skills you have, and the skills the role requires. Screen the recruiters you choose to build a career-long partnership with. When you are invited to interview, prime yourself to approach the conversation with excitement and curiosity.

 

Source: cheekyscience.com

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