Friday, May 22, 2020
Are Recruiters Helping Your Brand Management - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career
Are Recruiters Helping Your Brand Management - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career Talk about love-hate relationshipsâ¦recruiters rank right up there. You love them when they call to screen you for an opening of interest. Even if youâre currently employed and overwhelmingly busy, letâs admit it. Itâs an ego stroke when they call. If youâre in transition, their call makes your whole day euphoric. You tell your friends that, ârecruiters are calling,â and feel that life is good. A love-hate relationship On the other hand, you hate them when they donât get back to you, especially if youâve had a phone screen or, worse yet, a face-to-face interview. âHelloooâ¦did I invest some of my time and emotion in you and youâre ignoring me?â If youâre not hearing from them, theyâre telling you your status: inactive or theyâre working on something else. Either way, your behavior is the same: not concerned because youâre a valuable commodity and youâre busy. Hereâs where the brand management comes in. Avoiding the pesky suitor image I work with search firms all of the time and find that the job seeker (the âcandidateâ in search firm language) weakens him or herself and their brand constantly by chasing after search firms wanting to know their status. Although it feels highly personal, it isnât. Itâs a highly structured process. Thereâs a tactic or two to address this non-response but letâs take a trip back to high school first. Remember the person in high school who you didnât want to date? The one who kept showing up just hoping that youâd change your mind and really want to go out with him or her? The more they tried to interest you, the more you joked about them with other people. Although you felt badly, it wasnât your job to take care of that person so you distanced yourself from him or her. See where Iâm heading? Search firms feel the same way. Candidates who chase them, who stalk them after a conversation when they donât hear back, are turning their brand into that of the pesky suitor in high school. Youâre conveying the impression that you donât have any other alternatives, that youâre anxious, and that you donât know how search firms workâ¦not a pretty place to start for brand management. How search firms work Youâll get more details on this in a section of The New Job Security called âSelf Abuse: Job Postings and Search Firms.â Read it to get some direct quotes and advice from different global directors of some of the largest international search firms. Search firms work for companies putting round pegs into round holes as quickly as possible. They work only with already approved, funded, job openings, looking for a candidate who is already doing whatever the corporate client needsâ¦ideally with the competition. If you are considering changing the type of work that you do, are investigating new industries, or are not going straight up your current ladder, search firms arenât a great use of your time. Bring the search firm to you Hereâs the goal: build a brand that brings the search firm to you rather than your chasing them. How do you do it? 1. Be hot and be known. If youâre a recognized professional, as personalbrandingblog.com teaches, the world will start knowing about you. Oh, by the way, you need to be competent in your field, too. Just being hot doesnât keep you employed for too long, unless youâre Justin Bieber. Search firms can find you and youâll make them look good when they present you to their clients if youâre a desirable commodity. 2. Get into their BlackBerries. What makes you worth putting in their BlackBerries? Youâre going to be there because youâre asset to them. Pick out your favorite three firms and help them when you arenât expecting anything in return as in 1) connecting them with candidates for other searches theyâre conducting and 2) telling them about turnover within companies that might create new searches. 3. Establish relationships, not transactions. Getting to know them when youâre not looking for a job is the best time. Send them a holiday card, an article of interest, an invitation to a meeting youâre attending. Think of it as getting a couple of professional friends rather than someone whoâs a savior on the spur of the moment. The goal is to build a brand of success. Theyâll be attracted to you because youâre going to help them be more successful. As for the love-hate relationship? Youâre the one whoâs going to decide if you love them when theyâre pursuing you. Theyâre going to hate it when you need to turn some of them down. Author: Pam Lassiter is author of the award winning The New Job Security and Principal of Lassiter Consulting, a career coaching firm doing outplacement or internal growth programs for companies or individuals.
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