growled on Thursday, August 31, 2006 6:49:17 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
barked at blog swap

Big Bad Recruiting Blog Swap Week numero ocho of the Recruiting Blog Swap and here are my thoughts on print newspapers. Thanks to Toby Dayton of Diggings (with JobDig) for listening to me ramble on.

~tod

tags:

growled on Tuesday, August 29, 2006 6:02:26 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
barked at blog swap

Big Bad Recruiting Blog Swap As part of the Big Bad Recruiting Blog Swap, today's post [and the final one of the swap] is brought to you by Steven Kempton of the The Asia Pacific Headhunter. Steven offers an interesting take on developers, blogs, recruiting and how the three should go together. Enjoy!

Look at me! I am writing on Tod's blog. Why so excited? Because Tod is a software developer! So this is pretty cool since I love software and software companies. To me software is the epitome of technology. Offers so much, yet delivers so little. Unless of course you buy the "Missing Manual" ( I have always wondered, if you buy the "Missing Manual" on Amazon.com does it ever actually turn up at your house? And when you call customer service do they say, "You moron, what do you expect, it's a Missing Manual!").

Anyway a lot of hiring managers say the same things about a lot of developers. "Hey, I hired this guy, but I can't work out from what he's doing if he actually really turned up?". My experience is that developers are fun people and extremely tough to screen for recruiters and hiring managers alike. I have recruited my fair share of developers and quite simply, I have decided that from this point on I will only accept applications from developers with blogs (this doesn't preclude from headhunting people of course).

"You must be kidding" are the roars I hear from the crowd. That is exactly the answer I want because in software development, it's the crowds we all seem to be trying to avoid. You see, the developers I have met through blogs are all good. They love their work, they write about it, they can communicate (like Tod). So I am setting it as a new prerequisite, hopefully a bunch of other people in the recruitment industry will take it up and turn it into a standard (named after me). Even better if Tod can "evangelize" the idea within Microsoft for us (easily done since pretty much everyone over there blogs) then I could be on to a real winner and maybe even some "consulting trips" to Redmond to further develop the concept.

Anyway, my major point here is that blogs are awesome devices for developers. If a better marketing tool more open to any developer who wants to market their skills exists, then I have not found it yet.

Steven Kempton

growled on Monday, August 21, 2006 6:51:00 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
barked at blog swap

Big Bad Recruiting Blog Swap Week numero siete of the Recruiting Blog Swap and here are my thoughts on Daisy Dukes at work. Thanks to Your HR Guy for letting me reveal some teenage angst. ;-)

~tod

tags:

growled on Friday, August 18, 2006 7:12:48 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
barked at blog swap

Big Bad Recruiting Blog Swap Week numero seises [I might as well keep typing these in Spanish {shrug}] of the Recruiting Blog Swap and here are my thoughts on whether or not blogs affect brands. Thanks to David Kippen for the opportunity to think about something way outside of my little box.

~tod

tags:

growled on Friday, August 18, 2006 7:20:12 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
barked at blog swap

Big Bad Recruiting Blog Swap As part of the Big Bad Recruiting Blog Swap, today's post is brought to you by Harry Joiner of the Marketing Headhunter. This is a very timely post for me since we're smack dab in the middle of our annual review period at Microsoft and several of my co-workers have brought up this very topic. Enjoy!

I received a call this week from a friend of a friend.

My friend is a famous search engine copywriter, and the friend she referred to me is a smart, friendly, business-oriented 29-year old woman with an unblemished 8-year track record of success with the same Fortune 500 direct-to-consumer company. Four of those years were in web development. Within the last four years, she has singlehandedly built her employer's organic SEO programs with amazing success. Her resume is a work of art.

Anyway, this young lady (let's call her "Susan") is looking for new opportunities.

Here's why: Eight years ago, Susan signed on with her company for an annual salary of $60K plus a $2500 discretionary bonus. Despite several promotions, company policy has held Susan to cost of living increases at 6% per annum, while the discretionary bonus has never changed. Today she makes $95K + a $2500 bonus. Her performance reviews have been nothing less than exemplary.

So last week Susan gets reviewed, and -- as usual -- her boss raved about her performance. All of her KPI's are through the roof. Yet when Susan mentioned to her boss that people with her background are making $150K base + bonus on the agency side of the SEO business and $125K base + bonus on the client side, her boss said ...

"Susan, if you can get that kind of money elsewhere, go for it. Your employee status allows me to pay you $95K + a cost of living increase. Take it or leave it."

Less than an hour later, Susan was on the phone with me.

Note to HR Managers: Your employees do not operate in a vacuum. They know what the market is for their skillset. In particular, SEO programs are very profitable for both agencies and clients. Simply put, there is a ton of money washing around in the SEO space. Most top-flight SEO consultants are being billed out at $150/hour -- and everyone knows it.

The best way to keep your recruiting costs low is to not lose good people. Susan's defection is totally unnecessary. She's trained. She has solid inter company relationships. She's well-respected by her peers outside of the company. And her desk is very cash-flow positive. Replacing Susan will be a costly hassle if the company does it without my help. And if the company does it with my help, I'll charge them 20-25% of the replacement's base salary -- which will likely be $125K + bonus. The total cost to clean up this mess with be $60-70K.

The worst thing a company can do is to motivate their stars to look around. Trust me, if I get an unsolicited call from one of your A-players, I will remind them think that you don't appreciate them. That's my job -- and I'm pretty good at it.

And if you want your company to go from Good to Great, for each employee under review ask "Would I hire this person again?" If the answer is yes, then keep in mind the total cost to replace that person and assign their bonus accordingly.

In the meantime, if you are a corporate recruiter who's looking for a highly-skilled organic SEO program manager (single, home owner, no kids), call me at (678) 795-0900.

Page 1 of 4 in the blog swap category Next Page