Recruiters, don’t be sucked into competing on speed and price
Last week I blogged on why so many recruiters have a shallow understanding of what ‘competitive’ in our business actually means.
And so how do we thrive in a competitive world? What is the way to differentiate in 2013 and beyond?
Well it’s not cool to say it out loud, but as far as I am concerned it’s what technology cannot do that our clients will continue to pay for.
It’s a source of constant amazement to me how many of us in this industry have been completely seduced by the technology spin doctors. We agonise over social networking and how it will change the talent-sourcing model. We quake at the power of LinkedIn, and we are hypnotised by the thought our competitors will develop a piece of technology that somehow will make our service redundant.
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Don’t get me wrong. Technology is reshaping our business and having leading-edge technology is crucial, in as much as it allows your consultants to compete on an even playing field, and gives them the tools to give clients and talent what they really want.
But technology will not destroy our industry. At least not all of it – and definitely not the part we want!
And here is why. Finding a job or recruiting a new staff member is not a commodity purchase. We are not dealing with the same psychology which drives i-Tunes, e-trade or amazon.com.
This is important because it means that the real value provided by quality recruiters will still have a market. That is, screening, evaluating, persuading, assessing, negotiating, advising, consulting and acting, as an advocate for employers will still have tremendous value.
It is on these competencies that we need to compete.
But it’s also more than interpersonal recruiting skills (which by the way were largely lost during the decade-long hiring boom that preceded the GFC). Talent management is where the real battle for recruitment dominance will be fought. Building talent communities and managing effective communications channels with those communities is where the holy grail lies.
And we will need to compete in other ways too. Customers will increasingly call the tune. And by customers I mean candidates as well as clients. Maybe more so actually. The customer experience will build or tarnish your brand like never before. This is where social media will be able to destroy your business. Get it wrong and your brand will be brought down at viral speed. That’s where we have to compete. How we deal with customers and manage their expectations and experience with us.
Lack of personal interaction is doing our industry no favours. In fact I consider it one of our deepest flaws. Many recruiters use technology to avoid connecting personally with talent, when in fact the real advantage of technology is to get much closer to many more quality candidates.
So social media and technology generally is a threat to you only if you fail to recognise this fact…
… there will continue to be a market for tailored, personalised, high quality business solutions based on an advisory, consultative model, where access to talent is the differentiator.
Don’t be sucked in to competing on the basis of who can commoditise what we do the best. Don’t play the low margin, process game.
As your competitors claim, “we are bigger, have cooler technology and therefore we can do it faster and cheaper” or technology-driven platforms push to cut out recruiters altogether, your premise for doing business is…
“I can solve your problem because I understand your need and I know where the talent live”
- Posted by Greg Savage
- On May 6, 2010
- 8 Comments
8 Comments