Why Use a Recruitment Agency in India?
Why Use a Recruitment Agency in India?
Benefits, Fees, and Everything You Need to Know When Using
These Companies
When you’re looking to put workers in chairs, you might consider using a recruitment agency or service to get the job done. There are a variety of services available, but should you use them, and how do you get the most for your money?
The
cost of hiring can exceed 50 K per Employee. Some of that expense is in
training and lost productivity, certainly. But a good portion of the cost is in
the recruitment process itself: how much time HR staff and managers spend
discussing the opening; advertising; hours spent screening; interviewing;
re-interviewing; background checking; and more. HR departments frequently take
these steps only to have to start the process all over again. If you have a
dedicated recruiter on staff, you already have an idea of what the investment
is annually. Have you amortized their salary/benefits/perks over the number of
hires per year? That’s just the tip of the iceberg in the cost to hire.
So
why use a recruitment agency? Especially for small organizations, where
employees’ time is already stretched thin, recruiting in-house
often doesn’t make for a wise investment of resources. If you don’t have a
dedicated recruiter, you’re pulling precious work time away from other staff
members, time that affects your bottom line. A recruitment agency to get
the right candidates (not just a pool of applicants) may be
the way to go when you want to get the most bang for your buck.
Understanding Companies
Hiring Needs
Before
bringing on a recruitment agency, you should have an understanding of your
hiring needs in order to know how to best use the agency’s services.
Infrequently
If you hire infrequently – maybe once or twice a year – having a dedicated recruiter on staff is frivolous. An agency can get the right candidate in the door, screened and guaranteed. Your job will be minimal – set up meetings to see if they’re a good fit and make the hire.
If you hire infrequently – maybe once or twice a year – having a dedicated recruiter on staff is frivolous. An agency can get the right candidate in the door, screened and guaranteed. Your job will be minimal – set up meetings to see if they’re a good fit and make the hire.
Regularly
Maybe you hire regularly – about once a month. You might have someone who does the majority of your recruiting, trained to screen and interview compliantly, but they may need help getting candidates (again, as opposed to applicants) in the door. CareerBuilder reports that you can easily receive 75 resumes for every job opening. That’s a lot of screening. Even if you only spend five minutes on each resume/cover letter (which is generous), you’ll spend over six hours reading them in the hopes of finding a good candidate.
Maybe you hire regularly – about once a month. You might have someone who does the majority of your recruiting, trained to screen and interview compliantly, but they may need help getting candidates (again, as opposed to applicants) in the door. CareerBuilder reports that you can easily receive 75 resumes for every job opening. That’s a lot of screening. Even if you only spend five minutes on each resume/cover letter (which is generous), you’ll spend over six hours reading them in the hopes of finding a good candidate.
The
same survey showed 78 percent of recruiters found that at least half the
resumes were from unqualified applicants: That’s three hours wasted. A
recruitment agency can help lighten the load when it comes to screening, so you
can devote your focus to only on the most qualified candidates.
Frequently
Or let’s say you hire frequently: At any given time, you’re typically posting, interviewing, verifying, or filling a spot. You’ve got a lot of balls in the air at once, and it can be challenging juggling them all. Having an entire department to help would be great, but it’s not in the cards, nor the budget. A recruiting firm can be your HR department: They can take the bulk of the work off your hands and free you up to hire for quality, rather than quantity.
Or let’s say you hire frequently: At any given time, you’re typically posting, interviewing, verifying, or filling a spot. You’ve got a lot of balls in the air at once, and it can be challenging juggling them all. Having an entire department to help would be great, but it’s not in the cards, nor the budget. A recruiting firm can be your HR department: They can take the bulk of the work off your hands and free you up to hire for quality, rather than quantity.
Nonstop
You hire en masse. You’re upsizing, have high turnover (if you ever get time, you might ask why), or are hiring to fill multiple or seasonal spots. You need help!
You hire en masse. You’re upsizing, have high turnover (if you ever get time, you might ask why), or are hiring to fill multiple or seasonal spots. You need help!
One
of my former employers hired 400 seasonal staff members every spring to ready
for the summer rush. With a staff of six, it was a challenge to get enough
bodies in the door. Some agencies are equipped to deal with this type of
volume: They work with community agencies, foreign workers (and verify work
visas for you), and other outreach programs to help with large staffing needs.
Fill Jobs, Not Interview
Slots
Agencies
get paid to fill jobs, not book interviews. You’ll likely get fewer candidates,
but each will be qualified. As a recruiter, and then as a recruitment agency
branch manager, I got to know my clients well. They would not only tell me the
skill set required, but over time I learned who would fit in well and who
wouldn’t.
While
you don’t want to discriminate, you can certainly tell a recruiter about soft
skills. A quiet department may not be looking for someone who’s easily
excitable. Or, maybe you’ve had a lot of turnovers because everyone is looking
to move up in a year, so you want someone who would be satisfied with this work
for the long term.
I
had one company with exactly that problem: They kept hiring every six months or
so for the same spot. While I appreciated the commissions, I felt bad they had
to keep rehiring. In talking with the hiring manager I offered a suggestion.
Stop hiring new grads and look at a more seasoned worker (upping the salary a
bit). You want someone who knows what they want to do all day and isn’t looking
for a stepping stone or a bright spot on their resume. The result: a long term
hire that cost me in commissions, but gained me a connection with the company.
A good recruitment firm will do exactly that. They’re in it for the long haul.
They want to establish a relationship with you and they’ll do what it takes to
make it happen, even if there’s a short-term loss.
Trial and Snare (or Pare)
If
a critical team member is taking a family or medical leave, of course, you’re
going to hire a temp to fill their spot – you have no choice. Consider using
this as an opportunity to screen someone for another vacancy you might have
within the company. If they’re a good worker, work well with the team, and are
willing, you might even want to cross-train them during their temp stint to see
if they’d be a good fit.
Have
a position that takes longer than the 30/60 day trial period to train? Temp to
perm might be a good fit for you. It can take months to see if a candidate is
the right fit for some openings. When you do temp to perm, you’ll have a longer
trial period. And if they don’t work out, you don’t even have to fire them!
Just call the agency and have them do the nasty part. They’ll send you a
replacement, too.
And
if you decide they’re perfect? Some companies opt to buy out the contract –
paying a fee to take the hire off the “temp” payroll and put it on to theirs.
Depending on how long the buyout period is, you might consider leaving them as
temps for as long as possible. By keeping them as an agency employee you not
only spread out the cost of the buyout, you extend the probationary period. As
a bonus, after they go off the agency payroll and onto yours, you can initiate
your own, regular probationary period. Talk about hedging your bets!
Cashing in on the Guarantee
In
addition to recruitment help, all agencies offer guarantee periods. If the
hire doesn’t work out, you don’t pay and they start the search
over, not you. With some agencies you can negotiate on fees, with others
guarantee periods; with some both. Never hurts to ask. Particularly if you hire
volume through them, or you’re a new customer, definitely try to negotiate
either or both. But whatever the guarantee period, using it strictly as a
probationary period is critical. If they’re not working out, let the agency
start the process over.
If
you look back at the turnover you’ve had, how much can be attributed to rushed
hires, lack of screening, or settling just to fill that spot? When you use a
recruiter you stop making those mistakes on your own, and start making them
work in your favor.
Your
guarantee period is an opportunity to assure the new hire is the right hire.
Set realistic goals for what the new hire should have learned/achieved/mastered
within the warranty period. If they aren’t hitting those goals, it’s time to
trade. It might take a few tries to get the right match, but you’ve done very
little of the work to accomplish that feat: and, as a bonus, the agency learns
more about your company. They’ll be better able to fill your next slot once
they get a feel for your priorities and culture.
The Cost of Doing
Business
There
are many types of agencies out there, with varied fee and warranty structures.
Here are the three main types you’ll see:
Contingency
These agencies send in candidates and take a percentage of the annual salary after the new hire has satisfied the guarantee period.
Cost: Typically 15-25 percent of the annual salary
Guarantee: Generally 60 days
These agencies send in candidates and take a percentage of the annual salary after the new hire has satisfied the guarantee period.
Cost: Typically 15-25 percent of the annual salary
Guarantee: Generally 60 days
Temporary
or Temp to Perm
These agencies send in temporary workers who can come and go, or, if you find they’re a good fit, can transfer them to your payroll. Their contract can be bought out for a fee, or after a length of time, you can have them for free. There’s typically a sliding scale on the buyout: The sooner you take them off the agency payroll and onto yours, the higher the cost.
These agencies send in temporary workers who can come and go, or, if you find they’re a good fit, can transfer them to your payroll. Their contract can be bought out for a fee, or after a length of time, you can have them for free. There’s typically a sliding scale on the buyout: The sooner you take them off the agency payroll and onto yours, the higher the cost.
Buyout: Generally after 90 to 120 days
Additional Benefits
If
you’re still not convinced why using a recruitment agency may be the right
move, the decision to do so can bring some added benefits that may be
difficult to quantify immediately, but are nevertheless very real. For example:
Unless you’re Google or Apple, you probably don’t have thousands of qualified
candidates lining up to work for you. But a recruiter will “sell” your company
to a candidate as strong as they’ll sell the candidate to you.

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