Tuesday, May 26, 2020
Why Im a Fussy Old Fusspot Recruiter
Why Im a Fussy Old Fusspot Recruiter Now I am not saying I am fussy about everything anyone who has ever sat inside my car before it gets a valet will know that I donât get too fussy about mess in there (with 2 kids and a dog, itâs hard to be!) however, when it comes to recruitment matters, I do get a rather fussy head on me. About what you ask? Well Poorly Written CVs: Although I donât interview a CV (I believe I interview a person, not a piece of paper), it is indicative of someoneâs general intelligence as to whether they can spell and use grammar correctly. For goodness sake, with spell and grammar check on every PC, whatâs your excuse? Punctuality for Interviews: and I mean with ME as well as my clients. And when a client keeps a candidate waiting too, that is just as rude, in my opinion. The art of politeness is promptness and I start to get heart palpitations about this subject. Really just ask my husband âWhat time do you call this?â (joking!) Commitment: If I feel that either party is just âwindow shoppingâ and has no real substance to it, I generally get very nervous and actually start getting very fussy about it. I actually cancel interviews (yes I really do) if I feel that either person is not going to progress, even if the other party is the best thing since sliced bread. It can happen a lot in r2r and itâs a matter I divide opinion on in fact, itâs a subject I recently debated on LinkedIn and I got a lot of support from other moral recruiters(read on) Appearance: I am quite relaxed about whether someone wears a full suit to meet me as sometimes I just wear a dress, however it is common courtesy to ask/tell me this first and I absolutely expect a candidate to be suited accordingly for any client facing meeting, even if they are told to be casual. Business casual that is, NOT flipflops! Conclusions: Are any of these points making me look like Mr Fussy or actually, are they proving another point? That I am actually a very discerning recruiter who has high moral fibre and is relied on for this by the clients who choose to use my service (and ultimately pay for that hidden part of the service)? I believe that by being exhaustively fussy in what I do as a recruiter, I impart that fussiness (is that even a word??) onto my clients and candidates. And is that such a bad thing? I am not suggesting for one minute that I send out mini Lysha clones into the market! Far from it although the recruitment world may be a happier, sunnier place for it? But is there any harm in me being overly fussy? Would you cancel an interview on a candidateâs behalf if you felt âthey were going for the sake of itâ? I debated this recently as I mentioned and I spoke to another R2R, Jo Grace at Ready2Recruit in Scotland. She agreed with me that it was essential to be âfussyâ on a clientâs behalf as ultimately that is what the clients NEED a R2R for. Is she the rarity, like me and my colleague Jo? I think so? So is the fussy factor a universal recruitment trait that is essential in our psyche to be a good judge of character on our clientsâ behalf or is it just essential to R2R specifically? I donât know the answer to this last part for sure, but I think itâs better than being Mr CouldnâtGive2hoots or Mr SlingMudAtTheWall.
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