Thursday, May 28, 2020
The 5 Types of Responses Hiring Managers Give to CVs
The 5 Types of Responses Hiring Managers Give to CVs When youâre a recruiter submitting candidates to your hiring manager for review can be an unnerving experience, especially when the response can be so varied. Youâve spent days sifting CVâs, sourcing, interviewing and no doubt chasing candidates who seemed to disappear after your initial conversation. Finally getting to those 2 or 3 candidates that youâre certain fit every one of your hiring managerâs many requirements. But the hiring managerâs response never seems to be as simple as a yes or no. These are the 5 most common replies you can expect as a recruiter. 1. The ignore Itâs not just candidates that can ghost you in the recruitment process. As a recruiter, youâve got to expect those hiring managers that vanish after you have sent off CVs. Usually, they are the same hiring managers that call you constantly whilst you are sifting through your candidate pool, repeatedly asking for updates and making certain you are aware how urgent their role is. Then without notification, they disappear. All of sudden you can no longer get past the receptionist, or youâre always managing to just missed them when you call. Knowing the likelihood of your message getting passed on is slim. You try a follow-up email, a call to their work mobile or even a sneaky read receipt but still nothing. Where the candidateâs not quite right, was the vacancy filled or withdrawn? Youâre left not knowing, and then you have to be the bearer of bad news to the candidates but that all comes in a dayâs work as a recruiter. 2. The flat out no There is nothing worse than the flat out no. You were convinced the candidates would be perfect for the role, they fit the bill in all areas and they are actually enthusiastic about the position. What makes the flat no even tougher to take is the hiring manager who gives no explanation. âThey are just not rightâ or ânot what Iâm looking forâ are common phrases heard by recruiters, statements that definitely donât help in finding the perfect candidate. You have an inkling that the ideal candidate doesnât actually exist for this hiring manager but instead, youâre determined to fill the role. Itâs the back and forth with the hiring manager, you defend your candidates but they still arenât buying. No justification of the candidateâs years of experience, a wealth of skills or extensive qualifications that go beyond the brief seem to matter, the no still stands. 3. The Can we see some more CVs first? You canât go long working in recruitment before you hear this line. It usually follows a promising conversation about a great candidate youâve sent them, but the hiring manager has got the fear that something better is out there. The perfect candidate could be right in front of them but they want to see everyone else, just in case! They want options, theyâre indecisive and have the mindset that they should never offer to the first candidate, regardless of how perfect they are. The hiring manager is sure you can find someone more qualified and more experienced than all the candidates youâve found so far. 4. The I like them, but Ever had a conversation with a hiring manager when youâre just waiting for the âbutâ to appear. Itâs going too well to be true and then the hiring manager is suddenly questioning whether the candidate will take a slightly lower salary or can they negotiate on hours, benefits etc. The hiring manager begins picking apart every aspect of the candidateâs CV. They originally asked for an entry-level candidate but now they are wondering whether it would be better if the candidate was more experienced. Your candidates are good but the hiring manager wants better. Ideally, they want you to find someone with that candidateâs qualifications but the other candidateâs expertise. You thought you had gone above and beyond with this selection but you need to go one better to please this hiring manager. 5. When can they interview? There is nothing better than this response, youâre one step closer to filling the role. Youâve aced it and found the best candidates and your hiring manager agrees. The hard work paid off and now itâs just down to coaching the candidates through the interview and securing that offer. The ideal would be that every booking was this simple, but this is exactly why you spend so much time searching for the best candidates for the job and why you went beyond just sifting applications. Itâs all about the action, getting the candidates booked in as quickly as possible before theyâre snapped up by the competition. A good candidate never lasts for long. Now, youâve just got to hope that the interviews go off smoothly and the job is done.
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