So here’s the scenario:
While we are traditionally a direct placement
firm, we have a contract employee solution for firms seeking contract staffing.
We have had a Work Comp Adjuster contract employee out on assignment with an
insurance carrier, and this contract employee has been assigned a pending case
load of claims for one of this carrier’s larger organizations. This
organization for the carrier was looking to hire an adjuster to handle their
claims internally.
The organization had this position posted to their
website. A “recruiter” saw this adjuster job posting, then went onto LinkedIn
and found a profile for a Work Comp Adjuster and presented/referred this
profile to the organization for review. The organization actually knew the
candidate who was presented by this “recruiter” because it was the contract
employee handling their claims through the carrier as mentioned above.
Now the organization feels obligated to pay this
“recruiter” a fee because he “referred” the candidate to them. Okay let’s stop
right there. I had never heard of this “recruiter” beforehand, so I took to
Google to do a little research. They call themselves an IT recruiter. They are
located in CA. So….
First thing to take note is that this person is outside
their area of expertise. They are not an insurance recruiter. They do not
recruit claims. They recruit IT, or so they state.
Next thing to take note. This type of practice is
precisely what gives the recruiting profession a bad name. The good,
respectable recruiters are constantly battling this type of behavior. It is not
acceptable to ambulance chase in our profession. Respectable recruiters don’t
peruse employer websites looking for openings, then locate a profile on
LinkedIn, and then send in that profile with never even telling the candidate.
This is a completely unacceptable practice.
To make things even worse, the organization tells us that
this “recruiter” was hard to reach, did very little to assist them when they
did start the interview process, and the candidate even stated that the
“recruiter” bullied and threatened them.
Get a real job Mr. “Recruiter,” there is no place in this
profession for people like this.
Dear Hiring Manager/HR Professional,
This is not an acceptable practice. You do not owe this
“recruiter” anything. First, you knew the candidate before this “recruiter”
ever shared the LinkedIn profile with you. Second, the candidate didn’t even
know their profile was being sent to you. Third, this “recruiter” had no
business sending you this profile…period. Their tactics are despicable.
Scot Dickerson, CPC
President, Capstone Search
President, Capstone Search
2 comments:
Very unprofessional of you to air "dirty laundry" here on this association website. You must be new to the business.
20 years in recruiting. 30 working within the insurance industry. Not dirty laundry. Just the facts. No place in professional recruiting for recruiters that operate the way this person did. If you have passion for what you do and are tired of the tarnishing of our profession why not call it out.
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