• This topic has 76 replies, 35 voices, and was last updated 10 years ago by Drac.
Viewing 37 posts - 41 through 77 (of 77 total)
  • Am I being unreasonable?
  • andyrm
    Free Member

    End of the day the consultant makes his money on commission. If you had the option to take a cheeky punt for a slice of 15k or sit back, which would you do?

    I’d be banging that CV across every time!

    hmanchester
    Free Member

    As a Recruitment Manager with 8 years external and internal experience I should probably chip in….

    The recruitment company are trying it on. You’re already in discussion with the candidate. They can’t introduce someone to you you already have opened discussions with. The CV is an introduction thing is a red herring. Maybe in their T&Cs but not in reality!

    Liking the standard tosh above about recruiters. 15k for emailing a CV? Yes, that’s exactly how it works….!

    jon1973
    Free Member

    What do you call a thousand lawyers at the bottom of the sea?

    A good start.

    peterfile
    Free Member

    What do you call a thousand lawyers at the bottom of the sea?

    A good start.

    Charming. What contribution do you make to society jon?

    I drive past at least one hospital, three schools every morning which I did the legals for, not to mention part of the motorway I actually drive on.

    My mum had an operation in a wing of a hospital which I did the legals for, that felt quite good, pretty glad I wasn’t on the bottom of the ocean that day.

    Not looking for a medal, but I reckon I’m more useful to society in the office than I would be at the bottom of the ocean.

    A good start would be you getting some decent/new joke material.

    chewkw
    Free Member

    edlong – Member

    You’re being bitter. … You snooze, you lose.

    Okay … “you snooze, you lose” … okay …

    You have spoken to the candidate first Not the consulting firm, so you should be credited for. Not them. They are merely trying on the dirty tricks …

    jon1973
    Free Member

    Charming. What contribution do you make to society jon?

    Calm down, it was only a joke, and an old one at that. It’s one of those jokes that works for quite a few different occupations. I heard it all the time at university when I studied economics.

    jon1973
    Free Member

    br
    Free Member

    In which case your firm has nothing to lose by confirming that you were already in discussions with the candidate and telling the rec con to [scouse] do one [/scouse].

    Yes it has. It will have signed a contract to pay them once they’ve recruited someone through them – somewhere between 15% and 25%.

    tbh The Recruiter is doing their job.

    Tom-B
    Free Member

    Sob sob boo hoo I guess then! I’m guessing that if you had the opportunity for a 5k bonus then your salary is pretty tidy.

    Drac
    Full Member

    Liking the standard tosh above about recruiters. 15k for emailing a CV? Yes, that’s exactly how it works….!

    Enlighten me then as really am curious of how it can cost £15k to send someones CV?

    hmanchester
    Free Member

    The recruiter is doing his job…. Which in this case is trying it on.

    They can’t just send a CV, shout about T&Cs and claim a fee, it would never stand up. Where would it end? Say a recruiter makes a random candidate call, finds out they are at final interview with their client and no CV has been involved, which is common with LinkedIn, etc. Do you think they can then just wing a CV over and claim a fee?!

    Tell em to get bent and you’re considering how long to blacklist them for. Might even get a discount off the next fee if you’re, quite rightly, strong about this and play it right.

    Or roll over. Not my money!

    peterfile
    Free Member

    Sob sob boo hoo I guess then! I’m guessing that if you had the opportunity for a 5k bonus then your salary is pretty tidy.

    I think you’ve missed the point Tom.

    It can cost upwards of £20k every time we try to hire a new member of staff, so to avoid having to pay recruitment fees, many employers offer existing staff members a “finders fee” if they find a successful candidate themselves (which is much lower than the recruitment consultant’s rate), meaning the company wins and the member of staff wins.

    It has nothing to do with the existing employee’s salary or bonus, it’s like being paid a recruitment consultant’s fee for effectively doing their job.

    Enlighten me then as really am curious of how it can cost £15k to send someones CV?

    It’s a captive market. They have the candidates we need on their books. We would have no way of finding staff who specialise in the areas we need, we wouldn’t even know they existed. Unless of course you come through an internal referral 🙂

    Drac
    Full Member

    It’s a captive market. They have the candidates we need on their books. We would have no way of finding staff who specialise in the areas we need, we wouldn’t even know they existed. Unless of course you come through an internal referral

    Right Ok I’ve got that but why £15k?

    hmanchester
    Free Member

    Enlighten me then as really am curious of how it can cost £15k to send someones CV?

    Ok, here we go.

    Assuming we’re talking about contingency recruitment, as seems the case here, you get paid once you place a candidate with a client.

    You don’t get paid for anything else.

    99% of what you do in recruitment you don’t get paid for. You spend you time trying to generate vacancies from clients, building your candidate database, etc etc. You pay for the staffing cost, the advertising, the rent and rates, everything up front.

    The client sees the final piece of the jigsaw which is when the phone up and say have you got XYZ, and low and behold it they do have XYZ and they’ll email them over to you.

    “bloody hell, all they’ve done is send and email and now they want £15k”

    Here are the two points the making it hit home for me:

    1) There are plenty of agencies out there in a free unregulated and very competitive market. Supply and demand and a push for value couldn’t be clearer and yet the agencies still demand what is considered and extortionate fee? Well guess what, most agencies, especially in the current market, are up against it and will go as low as they can to still actually pay the bills and god forbid make a profit. The fee paid is the bare bones market rate with very little margin in there, if negotiated anywhere near correctly.

    2) If it’s so easy, why don’t companies just do it themselves, especially if it just involves searching a database and sending over a CV? It’s because it’s a professional service that they don’t have the skills/capabilities to do and professional services cost, whether that’s accountancy, consultancy, prostitution or legal!

    Rant over!

    edit:

    It’s a captive market.

    It couldn’t be less of a captive market. Candidates can register with as many agencies as they like for free, in fact recruitment business aren’t legally allowed to charge. They can apply direct. They can be a referral or recommendation from an employee (in this case). They can be on Linkedin. I’m not sure how less of a captive market it could be?!

    grantway
    Free Member

    WELCOME TO THE WORLD OF IT AINT WHAT YOU KNOW, BUT WHO YOU DO KNOW !!!

    hmanchester
    Free Member

    Except in this case exactly the opposite is true.

    They did know the candidate.

    They didn’t know where they stood legally (for a legal company) and are going to pay the fee.

    Almost right, but actually completely wrong. And a wee bit shouty.

    Drac
    Full Member

    So yeah figured that they’ll be running costs but still £15k seems bloody silly money. Maybe working in the public sector all my working life has given me sheltered view.

    Dark-Side
    Full Member

    True Story: a couple of years ago we were recruiting for an Office Manager and a certain recruitment consultancy (who have a somewhat ‘angelic’ reputation) kept sending us cv’s, of poor candidates may I add. One the the consutants at this firm decided she would like the job so contacted us directly for an interview. We liked her and offered her the job, which she accepted. A few weeks later we received an invoice from the consultants for their services in placing her with us! We obviously refused to pay a d it got quite nasty, with them threatening court action. Bunch if chancers.

    elPedro666
    Free Member

    Almost right, but actually completely wrong. And a wee bit shouty

    😆 😆 😆

    cynic-al
    Free Member

    I N R A T S

    …but…OP you are a commercial lawyer and this is a matter of the law of agency no?

    IIRC consultants can/do have clauses in their contracts covering this? There’s bound to be caselaw also?

    hora
    Free Member

    Tbh your employer has been very reasonable. It would be perfectly understandable if your employer had said ‘already KNOWN to us’. Why no cv? Could this person have thought it was just a lighthearted gossip/headsup?

    Kickbacks are very rare.

    Woody
    Free Member

    However, the next email was from her again, saying that just after our last email she had been approached about the same role by her rec con, who had offered to submit her CV for it despite being told that she was already speaking to us, she agreed without thinking of cost implications.

    Regardless of having to pay the RC (I don’t think you should as they didn’t ‘find’ her), I would be wondering if she is cut out for the job……….

    ……..a lawyer who “didn’t think about the cost implications” 8)

    stufive
    Free Member

    What Happend to advertising a job..doing a few interviews and then choosing an employee?…is it any wonder the country is on its arse!

    hels
    Free Member

    All I am seeing in this thread is pages of B Ship candidates arguing with each other. Carry on.

    br
    Free Member

    So yeah figured that they’ll be running costs but still £15k seems bloody silly money. Maybe working in the public sector all my working life has given me sheltered view.

    No, what happens in the Public Sector is you still spend the money, its just ‘hidden’ from you. And many, many Public Sector organisations use agencies, and the fees will be the same (ball park).

    I use to run a department, most paid £40-50k, so anyone recruited through a agency would cost us £7-10k.

    I usually said I was looking for staff to the team, before I called the agency. We didn’t pay referrals, just let them expense a decent meal with their partners. Got at least 50% of my staff through word-of-mouth.

    Drac
    Full Member

    Thanks b r for not answering the question.

    hora
    Free Member

    Stufive the best candidates. Its all about maximum exposure for the job. Thats time consuming/costly. Public sector is totally different. They dont hang out/wait but go with who is best available at that moment.

    Partly why now Brum council is shedding 30% of its staff sadly. A combination of average staff/poor decisions by said staff and a culture not driven by efficiency.

    stufive
    Free Member

    Jobs for the boys wink wink nudge nudge

    mefty
    Free Member

    In any success fee environment, the fee looks alot on a standalone basis but as hmanchester said you spend alot of time on things that don’t succeed so your charging structure has to recognize this wasted effort – or as a colleague used to say, you need to spend alot of time kissing frogs, before the prince comes along.

    konabunny
    Free Member

    Almost right, but actually completely wrong. And a wee bit shouty

    I lolled

    peterfile
    Free Member

    OP you are a commercial lawyer and this is a matter of the law of agency no?

    It’s not really about the law, more about internal politics.

    I say one thing (and believe me, I’ve said it a few times!), HR department (in charge of the recruitment) ignore me and say something else. Seems they are quite happy to pay loads more cash, they just weren’t interested. Doubt I’ll ever recommend anyone again though.

    All I am seeing in this thread is pages of B Ship candidates arguing with each other. Carry on.

    The irony of your useless comment is not lost on me 🙂

    br
    Free Member

    Drac

    Right Ok I’ve got that but why £15k?

    Because its a percentage of salary/package to be paid in the role.

    Was that the question I hadn’t answered?

    Drac
    Full Member

    Because its a percentage of salary/package to be paid in the role.

    Was that the question I hadn’t answered?

    Well I’d guessed that but still no one who works in the industry has been able to explain how it’s £15k, they’ve mentioned wages and running costs but seriously £15k for one client.

    andyrm
    Free Member

    I’ve worked in recruitment and as has been said, there’s a huge amount of work to be done to place someone – from initial client & requirement hunting, candidate sourcing, pushing CVs through, managing the process really tightly to ensure the candidate doesn’t go elsewhere or accept another role (in which case all your work is for nothing), not to mention the fees to subscribe to all the job boards to allow you to source CVs.

    End of the day, the higher the salary of the role, the harder that person is to find. And the agency needs to make their fees and the consultant needs to make their commission.

    br
    Free Member

    Well I’d guessed that but still no one who works in the industry has been able to explain how it’s £15k, they’ve mentioned wages and running costs but seriously £15k for one client.

    Because its a percentage of the salary! If you are recruiting for someone who’ll earn £100k, then that’s £15k is the agreed commission is 15%.

    I think you work in the NHS, how much commission do you think an agency got to get these two on board?

    Two new non-executives appointed

    Its not about sending a CV, you only get paid when the company employs the person you’ve sent (and there are often 2-3 agencies involved, so only one gets paid). And usually the company has a clawback if the employee stays less than a period (often upto one year).

    I’m not a recruiter, but have dealt with enough and employed enough folk to have a good idea with how it works.

    konabunny
    Free Member

    Well I’d guessed that but still no one who works in the industry has been able to explain how it’s £15k, they’ve mentioned wages and running costs but seriously £15k for one client.

    Because of the market. If you reckon you can do it for ten grand, do it.

    Drac
    Full Member

    Because its a percentage of the salary! If you are recruiting for someone who’ll earn £100k, then that’s £15k is the agreed commission is 15%.

    I think you work in the NHS, how much commission do you think an agency got to get these two on board?

    Right I see that too but it still seems silly money to me but get what you mean now.

    Because of the market. If you reckon you can do it for ten grand, do it.

    What? I never claimed I could do it cheaper I’m just staggered at what it costs.

Viewing 37 posts - 41 through 77 (of 77 total)

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