Top tips for recruiting - Business Works
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Top tips for recruiting

by Pravin Paratey, CTO, Affectv During the past three years that I've been CTO at Affectv, we have grown from three to 40 people, more than doubling our Engineering team in the last eight months alone, says Pravin (Prav) Paratey. In the next six months, we are looking to double this number again. We've made mistakes and avoided some ... here are the things I wish I'd known three years ago!

Writing the job spec

This is by far the most important stage. When I wrote my first job spec, I didn't do a very good job. It looked exactly like the other job specs out there, listing a bunch of skills that I was looking for.

I only considered what I wanted the candidate to do right now. I didn't consider projects changing, what the candidate's role would grow into and what exactly the candidate would be responsible for. Understanding what it is you need the candidate to do now, then in six months' time and even in a year's time goes a long way in defining the rest of the recruitment process.

Take the time to write that down. You will realise you have made assumptions on the skillsets you require, or you aren't clear on what the role will become once the 'project' is over. And once you have clarity on the role, you will be able to better assess a candidate's CV.

I focus on three key elements:

  • About the company - I describe what we do, what makes us different and some of the challenging problems we are attempting to solve.
  • About the role - What do I expect this person to do? Who will they report to? Which teams will they interact with? Will they manage a team? If so, what kind of team will they manage.
  • Responsibilities - And lastly, I list the person's responsibilities. Will they be responsible for a set of projects? A team?

Recruiters

When I began recruiting for the first time, working with recruiters was quite hard. I would be sent a hundred CVs a day and would be called incessantly regarding those. From looking at the CVs coming in, it was obvious that the recruiters had a limited understanding of the job spec and the kind of candidates I was looking for. Something was seriously wrong.

Surely, filtering candidates was their job, wasn't it? Why was I spending over half of my day going through CVs and rejecting 98% of them? I got in touch with more recruiters, spoke at length with them on the phone or in meetings, explained what I was looking for and made it clear that if I started rejecting more than 50% of the CVs, I would not be working with them anymore.

During these conversations, I had interesting reactions - some recruiters were quite offended. They had to send me lots of CVs because 'you might miss some good candidates!' And then, other recruiters weren't. They were patient, asked intelligent questions, and understood that it was better to send a select few CVs. They were the ones I wanted to work with.

I created a process

I narrowed down the number of recruiters to two. I created a process - CVs would come in on Monday and Wednesday mornings and I would respond on Wednesday and Friday afternoons. Interviews would be set for the following week.

This system worked wonderfully for me. I wasn't interrupted throughout the day and expectations were managed across recruiters and candidates. I have continued working with these two recruiters (even after they changed agencies) and will do so in the future.

When you have a new job spec, take time to explain the requirements to your recruiter. When they come back with CVs, tell them why you liked some and why you discarded the ones you did. Good recruiters will understand what you are looking for and will start sending you more relevant CVs.

ensure your company and job spec are portrayed in the way you intended

And finally, it's always worth following up on how the recruiter communicates with candidates. This can be done by checking the job spec document that they send candidates. Recruiters create their own version of the job spec before sending it to candidates. This is done to hide the name of the company and make it hard for the candidate to apply directly without going via a recruiter. Also, always follow up with the recruiters on where they post on the internet. Following these steps will help to ensure your company and job spec are portrayed in the way you intended!



For more information, please visit: affectv.co.uk



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