Monday, June 1, 2020
How Much Does a No Recruiters Policy Cost You
How Much Does a No Recruiters Policy Cost You How many times have you seen the words âno recruitersâ or âif youâre a recruiter donât call us as we wonât take your CVsâ? Iâve seen it hundreds, probably thousands of times. I started thinking about this recently and wondered how much not using a recruiter would cost the average tech firm out there with no internal recruiters working in the business. Those companies where the development team hire for the developers, diverting precious resource from the serious business of creating applications that make the company money, into those that take up a lot of time. I hire for .net developers (have a look at www.abrecruit.com â" have been doing so for close to a decade) and have a good idea of salary levels in this area, so decided to look at the level of remuneration for a Mid-level Developer. In this theoretical example, posting the adverts, reviewing the responses, carrying out interviews and tech screening (coding assignments and tests) are a CTO (earning £110k) and a Senior Developer (earning £65k). Combining these salaries we get £175k PA without benefits or holidays factored in. Base salary only. There are 253 working days in the year, so thatâs £691 per day, £86 per hour. I spoke to several hiring managers about their average time spent on the hires and came up with quite a picture, this is summarised below. Letâs breakdown the process for the hire, based on 15 applications, 10 1st interviews and 5 2nd interviews: Writing job spec 2.5 hours Speaking to job boards and posting adverts 3 hours Fielding calls from recruiters applicants 6 hours Reviewing CVs 8 hours Telephone Interviews (30m x 15 interviews) 7.5 hours Emailing technical tests after successful interview 1 hour Reviewing coding exercises (x10) 10 hours Face to face interviews (1hr x 10 interviews) 20 hours 2nd Interviews (1hr x 5 interviews) 5 hours Subsequent meetings about the interviews 4 hours Making offers (emails / calls / paperwork) 1 hour Total 64.5 hours Cost of adverts (Stackoverflow / Jobserve / Monster) £600 Grand total £6,448 So, that gives a grand total of £6,448 which is totally non-refundable should your decided applicant reject an offer or start and leave; nor does it take into consideration the impact on business of dragging managers into meetings for the hires, and the time taken away from critical development projects that your Senior Developer would otherwise be working on. Im currently operating on a placement ratio of roughly 3:1. That means I send approx. 3 CVs to a job and 1 of them will result in a placement. Using a specialist recruiter like me, you can remove a lot of the process above. Letâs see how much the £40k mid-level developer costs your business when you use me: Writing job spec 15 mins (Iâve got loads of templates) Reviewing CVs ½ an hour (Theyâll be good!) Telephone Interviews (30 min x 3 interviews) 1 ½ hrs Reviewing coding exercises 2 hours (again theyâll be good!) Face to Face interviews (1hr x 2 apps) 2 hours 2nd Interviews 2 hours (youâll get them both back) Making offers ¼ hr Total 8 ½ hours Business Cost £731 20% fee £8,000 Grand total £8,731 I offer a sliding scale rebate to give my clients money back if the applicant leaves at any time in the first 3 months of employment too, so if the hire doesnât work out for any reason then theres a credit en route. I do sometimes use the specialist boards such as Stack Overflow, so each time these may be used would add £250 to the total spend. So, on the grand scheme of things the real cost of using a recruiter like me isnât £8,000 as a fee that you receive as an invoice on the day the candidate commences employment, itâs actually more like £1,552 as youâll be spending £6,448 to do the job yourself. Still sure you want to hire directly? You need to be asking yourself why youâre adopting a no recruiters policy when we offer such good value. We know our market and can turn hires around in just a few days opposed to weeks or months directly.
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