Split Story: Stepping Outside of Your Specialty or Reach

by Sarah Freiburger

Piggy BankMaking split placements outside of your specialized niche or industry is a strategic business move that can add significant revenue and help attract multinational clients. So why is everyone not doing it? Stepping outside of your comfort zone is scary. It is often intimidating putting yourself out there when you are unsure of who and what you will encounter. You may find other recruiters that have the same clients, or may be concerned you will balk at the client’s questions outside of your specialty. The competitive nature of everything we do in our business ventures can create doubt and uncertainty. It is amazing that our worst fears are often never realized, and in fact, anxiety is turned into success.

Consider this split placement story where the result of stepping out paid off for a firm:

A Memphis-based member of NPAworldwide used to work purely finance roles. As the network advertises firm roles across the globe and of all specialties, his confidence to attain these roles grew. He also quickly realized the strength of trading partners after being exposed to recruiters that have varying specialties outside of his own, including work in engineering, as well as roles and candidates outside the United States. Read the rest of this entry »


What’s the Learning Curve with Splits?

by Sarah Freiburger

papaya-halfNew recruiters come into a recruitment network to expand their reach, build their revenues, and to better serve clients and candidates. If you’ve never been in a split network, what’s the learning curve? How does it work? How long will it take to get that first split placement fee in your pocket? Where do you start? Here is a story about how a couple of experienced NPAworldwide members reached out to a brand new member and helped close a deal:

Don Previti, managing partner of DVP Partners, LLC, and Jim Lyons of LH International, who both work the financial services domain in New York City, were advised of a new member, Elisa Sheftic of Right Executive Search, who had just joined and had a very similar focus on the financial service and hedge fund space, and both took the time to call Elisa and introduce themselves. “It was immediately apparent we had many mutual shared connections and direct business compatibilities,” Don said. Don and Jim invited Elisa to lunch in Manhattan, where they both work, so they could meet face-to-face and discuss their success on NPA and how they can help her optimize the power of the NPA network, Don said. “I believe this was a pivotal point in defining our relationship and success going forward,” Don said. “Following our in person lunch with Elisa, we summarized some immediate action points and agreed to send each other some open requirements.”

One such role was a Senior Compliance Officer in the hedge fund sector based in San Francisco that Don had been working on for four months and was unable to fill.

Within a week, Elisa sent Don a great candidate, which his client wanted to interview right away. The phone interview went well, and the candidate was invited for an in-person interview the next week with the hiring manager and two partners. They made an offer, and the candidate started last month at a $150,000 salary. Don’s placement fee was 20%, so he earned a $30,000 commission, half of which goes to his new partner, Elisa. “So within 3 weeks of Elisa joining NPA, we had our first deal closed,” Don said. “I will be sending Elisa a check for $15,000 and we now have two additional requirements that are in varying stages of success.”

Elisa said that one of the things that make her partnerships successful is that Don and Jim are very quick to get her feedback. Openness and transparency shows a level of trust that can reassure a new member that recruiting is not always a dog eat dog world.  

“That’s a tribute to their professionalism and the strength of their relationships and it makes my team and I want to work on their assignments,” Elisa said. “Anyone in this business for any length of time knows that is not always the case with partners or clients and it is appreciated and it’s the stuff long lasting relationships are made of.”

This deal not only shows the power of the network, but the power of folks like Don and Jim, who took the time to reach out to a new person and introduce themselves.

“I believe this short story demonstrates the power of a split placement network when people reach out and leverage the national and international resources provided,” Don said. “I also hope this provides all new members a sense of encouragement that their first placement will happen and it’s in their hands to reach out to like minded partners to facilitate the process.”

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Split Placement Story: “Efficiency Equals Money”

by Sarah Freiburger

additionIn a network, independent and boutique agencies look to add value to their clients and candidates by positioning themselves as global recruiters covering all specialties without losing their culture or personal service. When you are electing to involve another recruiter on a search, the efficiency you both show will always close deals. Here is a story of a brand new Sydney based member reaching out to another member.  They are both generalist recruiters, both looking to service their client and candidate as best possible.

The firm with the position joined NPAworldwide near the end of December of this past year. The owner and one of her recruiters had attended an open lunch meeting as a way to meet some of the members prior to joining. Right after Christmas break, this owner was already working the system to find a recruiter to match up to her client’s needs. Sparing no time, it was a matter of calling the other firm, and they proved to be very welcoming and friendly. The client required a Client Services Officer for their Financial Planning business in Western Sydney. They had advertised the position themselves but hadn’t had much success. After briefing the other recruiter on the role and giving all pertinent details that they would need to properly source a candidate, the search was on. As this was a first split experience, it was unknown how important this search would be to the other recruiter or what kind of results would be returned.

The very next day the recruiter already sent over an excellent candidate along with her reference check! The firm was amazed at this efficiency and extra step that was taken. The candidate met with the client on January 14th. They loved her. She subsequently had another interview and psychometric testing and the client offered her the role on January 22nd with an immediate start date. Both were so excited.  The firm would have never found this passive candidate with out the split partner’s help. The efficiency of delivering a strong candidate that was ready to make a career move made all the difference in this split.

In March, the client had already paid their invoice and the split fee sent to the other recruiter and the network; all in the space of two and a half weeks. What really seemed to click was the collaborative nature of working together to help place a great candidate. With both trading partners putting the focus on efficiency instead of letting time lag, everyone was on board from the start to end. The turnaround time was very quick and the mutual respect had been extremely refreshing.

If you have been wondering what the return on investment could be when joining a network or splitting with another firm, this is an excellent example of how a firm’s revenue grew in just over two weeks.

 


Split Placement Story: Global Reach has Big Payoff

by Sarah Freiburger

yes weAt a recent Global Conference for our network, we approached firm owners with the idea to “pledge to work internationally” to take advantage of the fact that they were in a worldwide network that allowed them a unique advantage over other independent firms by giving them local partners on the ground all over the world. These partners know the language, culture, and are able to provide boutique service to your firm and clients without you sacrificing your business. Many times, it is the extremely rare searches that client’s offer that will keep you respected with their company if you, by some miracle, are able to fill. If you can handle that, why would you not be able to handle all their other searches? Read the rest of this entry »


Split Placement Story: Earn Respect by Helping Others

by Sarah Freiburger

blue2-orange-fishWe have all seen an award winner accept a prestigious honor from their peers, whether in our work industry, a committee or organization we are a part of, or just on television. Whenever I see that moment of honor, I aspire to one day become someone who is looked up to and respected enough to receive such recognition. In a split placement network of close to 500 firms and over 1,300 recruiters, it is easy to feel as though your efforts are going unnoticed; however helping others when there is no financial gain for yourself is one of the true signs of a leader. The following split story highlights not only a great international split, but also a member going out their way to see others achieve success.

At a Global Conference meeting held in Denver, CO, a member, Jim, from Georgia, connected with several strong members in the network, one being the regional director for the Canadian membership, James. Jim’s firm planned to work several international roles and he has been hoping to find some solid candidate providers they could reach out to at this meeting.

As a follow-up to the meeting, Jim emailed James with a General Manager position in Canada that he was going to be discussing with his client that very afternoon, asking James for advice on how difficult the role looked to source, who could help source for this role, and any other help James could provide.

Many times, when something like this crosses your desk, you immediately get selfish and consider whether the job is in your industry, if you could take on the recruitment for it, and what is in it for you and your business. If it is not a match, which in this case it was not as James does nothing with regards to pumps/fluids, it would be really simple to not respond to the email and carry on with your day. However, that lack of response is doing nothing to build up respect for your name or brand, and also not helping the organization you belong to.

Instead, James racked his brain for fellow members he knew of that worked that particular space and took the time to introduce Jim to fellow Canadian member, Henry. He worded it exactly like this, “I don’t know anything about pumps/fluids but if I had that order the first guy I would call would be Henry.” How reassuring to hear such confidence in someone able to assist you, likely hours or minutes before you take a client call.

Well, James was completely correct in his introduction, and not only was Jim able to secure the role from his client, a 100,000+ job at nearly a 30% fee, but Henry successfully sourced it, and the two ended up splitting a $33,000 fee, with the added benefit of a happy client now knowing that the firm can handle those international positions well.

While James did not get a portion of that fee, he now has two very happy members that appreciate and respect him for connecting them, and I am sure that the next time he needs a favor or job filled, they will return the favor of responding to him with any help they are able to. I encourage you to stop the next time your mouse hovers over the “delete” button on your email to first consider what other options or reply you could provide the partner on the other end.


Get the Most Out of your Next Recruiter Conference

by Sarah Freiburger

nparecruitersConferences can be one of the most valuable business tools in your various resources if you appropriately plan and attack them. Each event you attend could very well have in attendance one of the most important business contacts you meet, someone who could change your business model by listening to a speaker, add revenue by becoming your new split placement partner, or reduce cost significantly with a new tool from a sponsor. Read the rest of this entry »


How Do You Split So Well?

by Sarah Freiburger

I hope the New Year so far finds your business doing sound with a plethora of additional positions and/or candidates that have you thinking of making more split placements or adding them to your business model. In a split network, firms work position openings cooperatively in order to speed the job fill. Once complete, they share the fee collected. Over time, the network sees many success stories, and some firms really stand out as stellar trading partners that are constantly making deals. One firm that has exported candidates for over 60 roles in the network caught another firm’s eye as they prepared information for a regional meeting, so they asked their top trading partner what it was that caused this firm to split so well? Here is what they were told:

First and foremost, this trading partner is available and focused. Not only is he always answering his phone or getting back quickly, but each position is an assignment that once agreed to, he takes on fully. Smart and equipped, this trading partner will dig deep for answers as well as working hard to find the best candidates. This is more than just searching through a database and forwarding potential fits both old and new, this is really researching candidates to present only quality options to your trading partners, just as if you were working your own independent search for a top client.

The reason the above is true is because the trading partner with the position is giving their trading partners QUALITY work, and not wasting their time with only the near impossible search, or a vague client relationship. Most, if not all of the searches, have direct access to a hiring manager and human resources. Both trading partners are included on calls to both of these, especially in the beginning of the search. This direct access leaves little room for requirements to be lost in translation, and allows the exporter to be fully invested in finding the best candidates.

Another reason this exporter comes so recommended is his ability to think outside the box. He will produce a variety of candidates, something even a little different from the original job order’s description which challenges the hiring manager’s thought process. While this does not always work out, when it does, additional placements usually result. This is able to happen based on the above, but also because these trading partners try to work on as many exclusive jobs as possible. When the job order is exclusive, there is more room to try a couple of options the recruiter may see as more viable than the one top candidate you try to submit to match the order perfectly. If the job order is less exclusive, then the trading partner is aware of that, and can gage their own activity.

Finally, it is important that the trading partners are in contact daily or close to it. The trading partner with the client relationship works to stay on top of the client activity, and regularly communicates it to the exporter. This way they know the exact temperature of each search, and can prioritize accordingly.

If this was an eye opener for you if you are already in a split network, align yourself with these practices to start seeing a better return and gain more trading partners, so that you may be asked eventually, “How do you split so well?”

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Communication in a Recruiter Network

by Sarah Freiburger

image of business telephoneJoining any organization or membership is a great first step in expanding networking capabilities and building relationships as well as revenue. Independent recruiters join split placement networks to not only build relationships, but trading partners. In those networks especially, proper contact is key. These tips are brought in part by NPAworldwide’s member services manager, Marcia Bateman, along with comments by actual members of the network. Read the rest of this entry »


Social Media: Which Sites to Choose and How to Use

by Sarah Freiburger

45377332.thbAt an expo I attended a few months ago, I visited many booths that sold services for advertising, marketing, and public relations. I found in my pile a really good piece summarizing different social media platforms and how to use them as a business from the David James Group, and wanted to share for those who set social media as a goal for branding and communicating in 2016. Here are some ideas for sites that I thought would work well for independent recruitment firms. Read the rest of this entry »


Sales and Marketing Tools Recruiters Love : Clearslide

by Sarah Freiburger

csPeriodically in the sales and marketing world, we come across a tool or program that makes our lives that much easier, and anything that makes sales and/or marketing easier is a win in my book. I use the tool Clearslide to load PowerPoint presentations about our recruitment network, and then I am able to send them to an email address in a professional online format rather than as an attachment. Read the rest of this entry »


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