Best Advice for Finding Excellent Jobs and Excellent People

This post is going to summarize the advice I’ll be giving to a few hundred recruiters next week at a LinkedIn event for staffing firms in New York City. If you’re a job-seeker, don’t fight or complain about the advice, take advantage of it. It has to do with how recruiters should find people for their open jobs.

Over the past 60 days I’ve been taking a survey of how the best people in any field find new jobs. The big finding, which isn’t surprising, is that they found their current job through some type of referral. The other equally important point: few of these people were actively looking. They were proactively contacted by someone who had been referred to them. Given this fact, my advice to recruiters is to spend more time getting great referrals rather than cold calling, posting jobs or sending emails to people they don’t know.

My advice to job-seekers is pretty much the same: spend more time networking (60-70%) rather than responding to job postings. Here’s a recent post on how to do this and an introduction to a video series covering the full topic in depth.

If 90% of the best people find their jobs through networking, recruiters should be spending 90% of their time networking and getting these referrals. It starts by appreciating the power of the concept expressed graphically in this diagram.

LinkedIn consists of three types of people: those in your network (1st degree connections), those connected to those in your network (2nd degree connections), and everyone else (3rd degree connections and beyond). You obviously can instantly connect to anyone in your network, and if you’re good at getting referrals, you can find some outstanding people who are their 1st degree connections.

Doing the math, you’d need 42 strangers to find one qualified person vs. proactively seeking out one pre-qualified referral.

These connections are invaluable since they can instantly become acquaintances just by mentioning the name of the person who referred them to you. The big deal about acquaintances is they call you back. Even better: they’ve already been pre-qualified for your opening. Why else would you call them? Now all you need to do is have a discussion to determine if your opening represents a career move. The problem with strangers (those in the 3rd degree and beyond) is only 10% or so will call you back, and of these, less than 20% will be qualified. Even less will be interested in what you have to offer. Doing the math, you’d need 42 strangers to find one qualified person vs. proactively seeking out one pre-qualified referral. That’s a huge difference and why working with acquaintances rather than strangers is a game-changing advantage for recruiters. (You’ll be able to watch the stream of the June 17 event to hear the collective gasps when I describe how to do this using LinkedIn Recruiter.)

... use the first 5-10 minutes of your first call to conduct a “career gap analysis.”

Of course, you’re still left with the challenge of converting these people into interested candidates for your open positions. To do this you’ll need to use the first 5-10 minutes of your first call to conduct a “career gap analysis.” This is the difference in what your job offers in comparison to what the person is now doing. I tell job-seekers that in order for a job to represent a career move they should get a 30% increase. But, and it’s a very big “but”, the 30% is not all in compensation. The 30% is a combination of job stretch, job growth and any increase in total rewards. Job stretch relates to how big the job is in terms of scope, impact, size of team and budget, and visibility. Job stretch refers to the growth rate of the underlying business in comparison to the candidate’s current rate of growth. Total rewards consists of short- and long-term compensation and benefits in comparison to what the person is now receiving. This “30% solution” is a good way to evaluate any move by considering the short- and long-term benefits in balance.

Unfortunately, most job-seekers (especially those not looking) never find out about the stretch and growth piece since they become overly fixated on compensation. When candidates push me on this, I just suggest that if the job doesn’t represent a career move, the compensation increase doesn’t matter. This is often enough to have them agree to a preliminary career discussion. Recruiters, on the other hand, are overly fixated too, but in this case it’s on the person’s list of qualifications.

Surprisingly, all of these problems vanish when you call referrals. Just the fact that you have a common acquaintance, the conversation is not about rushing to fill a specific job, it’s about determining if the job represents a possible career move. Equally important, since the person has been pre-qualified, the person’s absolute years of experience and list of qualifications are less important than the person’s track record of past performance. Just as important, compensation takes its rightful place in the discussion: after the job and career opportunity are better understood.

Collectively, that’s why recruiters should focus more on getting more acquaintances rather than force-fitting some person into a role they know little about. Job-seekers should do the same.

_____________________

Lou Adler (@LouA) is the CEO of The Adler Group, a consulting and training firm helping companies implement Performance-based Hiring. He's also a regular columnist for Inc. Magazine and BusinessInsider. His latest book, The Essential Guide for Hiring & Getting Hired (Workbench, 2013), provides hands-on advice for job-seekers, hiring managers and recruiters on how to find the best job and hire the best people. You can continue the conversation on LinkedIn's Essential Guide for Hiring Discussion Group.

Top Photo: Ruslan Grumble / Shutterstock

EXCELLENT OUTSTANDING

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Melissa Jewison

Head of Global Talent @ Webflow

9y

Lou, the way you presented it was so articulate and easy to understand. I have been preaching this methodology for a long time too. It's important that BOTH candidates and organizations realize that a referral by a top performer is always going to garner some attention. If they've made a personal connection - even better. At the end of the day, we are human, and that's the key point to remember. If you work for a great company, share your experiences with those who connect to you - pay it forward. You never know when you might need the same helping hand in the future.

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Matt C.

Geologist seeking new opportunities

9y

This is very useful advice. Thanks for helping me understand how to approach the job-seeking process more efficiently.

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David Clemons

Human Resources Service Member

9y

Dear Lou Adler, I completely grasp what you are saying. And as a result I will attempt my input (albeit a couple days after your post) I myself am seeking leads and assistance not necessarily for a job (presently but I won't turn down offers immediately either) due to being in the United States Army for another set 4 years, possibly 2 1/2 years if I get an early out due to a better job opportunity. I am currently and actively seeking assistance in drawing up a plan (first I need adequate references of information) to know what guidance and requirements are for changing up the military's retirement system. But for anyone who knows anything about currency market trading it is extremely risky and extremely volatile producing high-risks for those who are unaware or unfamiliar with the current trends, situations and etc.. etc.. etc... that being said I am not saying it is not profitable. I would love to propose a plan (with all the adequate requirements of both military and civilian concepts provided in my plan) but I am running into a brick wall seeing only appropriations being mentioned in all the military guidance and nothing about investment requirements. If this is due to there are no military guidance the I would request for someone who can prove their resourceful answer via from xyz organization or etc.. I would greatly appreciate it so I know that I just need to resort to the civilianized trading plan requirements before I set-up my entire plan of how I would succeed if I was given the humbling chance and opportunity to honor my fellow Service members with an opportunity to not be required to stay in the military for 20 years to receive any type of adequate compensation for their efforts in the military. Before I submit up my complete plan I would need complete guidance as everything I have read and told so far extends to needing a series 3, series 34(?) and series 7 and potential CPA licenses to cover the legality requirements. If I can get absolute requirements confirmed then I can work further towards my plan, but I feel left hung to dry as long as I have no way to absolutely confirm all the requirements first. For how can someone say that this is my plan without confirming what all the requirements to submit up an idea first would need to cover and be? Very Respectfully Seeking, David Clemons

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Sunlwin Sl

Board of Directors at SIYB(Myanmar);ILO

9y

Dear sir, I like your teaching n presentation on last network applying methods,but all cannot be agree. Appreciate ur presents for lower IQ jobless seekers.(In our country Myanmar,internet connections are poorest.excuse me) Mush regards, Sunny Sun Lwin sunlwin.sl@gmail.com

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