Posts Tagged ‘recruitment agencies’

Recruitment agencies

Wednesday, January 25th, 2012

I’ve been dealing with a lot of recruitment agencies recently, because of my ongoing hunt for a part-time shop job. I’ve had very mixed experiences, which has made me realise that it’s really, really important to deal with decent ones. The bad ones drive me crazy.

It shouldn’t be complicated, really. There are companies out there who want to employ decent workers, and people who want to be employed by decent companies. But, somehow, a lot of recruiters manage to make their role as middleman into some strange unhelpful role that doesn’t solve anything.

I’m someone who generally prefers to communicate by email than by phone – I guess it goes with my personality and life choices, seeing as I work with computers – and it really frustrates me when I provide all my details in writing, in an easy format, then they call me anyway and ask me all the same questions. Sometimes it’s just not convenient to talk – and I get the feeling they’re not listening anyway. I’m just lucky I’m not jobhunting while in other employment.

There are some good recruiting agents, though. The best ones are those who listen to what you want and read your CV and preferences properly before contacting you for further information. And, in short, who just act like human beings instead of gatekeepers. A lot of the time, the job might not even be a good one. Recruitment should always be a two-sided process. I don’t want to be expected to impress a company unless it’s also prepared to try to impress me and deliver a good role. Otherwise, why would I go and work there? It just wastes everyone’s time if someone is recruited, then gets disappointed and leaves. So, yes, in summary – I am going to keep a note of the good recruiters I’ve encountered and ignore the rest.

The trials of jobhunting

Saturday, December 10th, 2011

As previously discussed, I’m seeking a part-time shop job, so I can get some retail experience for when I branch out into the electronics retail game to go along with my computer programming.

It’s hard going, though. I don’t mean in terms of tough manual labour or major stress, but simply the monotony of it. The same patterns repeat themselves again and again.

I’ve posted my CV on job websites, to make sure employers can find it. It’s optimised with lots of keywords that recruiters would search for, including a clear statement of what I’m looking for. I’ve also signed up for jobs-by-email, so that I get advertisements sent to me every day featuring whatever is new out there. They come every day – lots of them! They say that times are tough, but there are jobs out there.

The main problem is filtering through to find the ones worth applying for. I haven’t wanted to narrow down my criteria too much, in case I miss something good, but that means I get sent quite a few things that look dodgy or aren’t right for me.

But nevertheless, I trawl through them and make a list of the decent ones – then look at them in more detail, one by one. If they still seem worthwhile, I apply using my CV and a covering letter… though some ask you to complete an application form. Copy-and-paste comes in handy, at that point!

Then I wait. But the responses haven’t been too great so far. It’s awkward because a lot of them are handled by recruitment agencies – and there aren’t many good ones out there. Many of them act as a barrier to getting a job, instead of making it easier! They often don’t have time to deal with all the applications they get, so they don’t bother responding. Or, worse, it turns out the job details were wrong, or were just being used as bait to get more people signed on to their books.

Sigh. I think I’m going to tick the ‘direct employers only’ box next time I go through the websites.