Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Recruiting structure

Wednesday, March 26, 2008
Recruiting as a profession:

There are three aspects to recruiting:
1. First Party or Corporate Recruiting – you hire employees to your own payroll, they work under your managers. Most contract recruiters are working in this role.
2. Second Party or Staff Augmentation – you hire to your own payroll, employees work under client management. Also called labor vendors, labor brokers or contract services. Most temp agencies use this model.
3. Third Party or Headhunting (a.k.a. Executive Search) – clients hire your candidates for their own payroll.

There are four kinds of Headhunting firms:
1. Contingency – paid when the client hires (I did this)
2. Retained Search – Paid a flat rate to find one or two of the best candidates.
3. Hybrid – I've heard these firms called fee plus, "retigency" and combination fee. Creative recruiters and sales reps can work many kinds of deals. One typical arrangement is an up-front retainer, plus a per hire bonus.
4. Source only – a newer model where the client pays a flat fee to receive a limited number of pre-qualified candidates. The client contacts the candidates and moves on from there.

1 comments:

Chris said...

Liked the post. Specifically had a questions about "Source Only." During these tough economic times, clients are looking to save money. This being said, wouldn't a smart plan be for clients to stop paying recruiting firms bloated fees (75-100% markup) for contract resources and instead hire an internal recruiter to find the contract resources and then just payroll them at 20-25% with their current contract vendors, thus saving 50+% on client contract spend.

 
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