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Only the Employed Need Apply (Especially in Sales)
I’ve been sitting on this blog post for a while thinking that its efficacy would get better and better as the economy and job market failed to recover at the pace that the economists thought (hoped) it would. It looks like my hunch was right.
Nine months ago, the Wall Street Journal published an article called “Only the Employed Need Apply“. The premise of the article was that many employers were only interested in talking to people who were already employed – even if the candidate who had applied had lost their job even after performing at a high level.
Bobby Fitzgerald, a partner in five restaurants in three states, says these days he gets two dozen or more unsolicited résumés each day at one of his Phoenix restaurants, the White Chocolate Grill. But Mr. Fitzgerald says his top candidates, for jobs ranging from servers to management, usually are people who are employed elsewhere. He currently has 50 openings across his five restaurants and has told recruiters to bring in only people who are working.
When you consider that in March 2010 our unemployment rate is still on the precipice of 10% and the average time that someone is unemployed is still over 1/2 of a year, it would appear that Business Leaders like Bobby Fitzgerald aren’t alone.
At Hire Better, we’ve seen a significant up-tick in the number of clients who want us to assist them in hiring salespeople. For those salespeople who we see as applicants, the statistics are NOT in their favor if they’re applying for a role in which Hire Better is involved. Here’s what we’ve found:
In a typical hiring cycle, assuming that we have 100 people to consider for a role:
- 82-85 will be Direct Applicants
- 12-15 will be People who are “headhunted” or from our Network
- 1-3 will be Referrals from internal employees at the client company
When we get down to the Top Three Finalists, they’ll look like this:
- 1 Direct Applicant
- 1 “headhunted” Candidate
- 1 Referral
And when the finalist is hired: The chance of the Direct Applicant goes DOWN exponentially as the salary and responsibility goes UP.
For a Sales role, the prospects of a Direct Applicant are even WORSE. The same statistics will apply to the Candidate pool as before but I have to expand the pool to 5 people when you look for Finalists:
- 1 is a Direct Applicant
- 3 are “headhunted”
- 1 is a Referral
And when this is the case, the Referral has more than a 50% chance of getting hired and the Direct Applicant has less than a 10% chance. In the case of sales candidates – I believe these stats are just about right. And they’re justifiable! If you’re considering hiring an unemployed salesperson or sales manager, you should be asking yourself “Why would a good salesperson be unemployed?”
Dave Kurlan, who I haven’t mentioned in quite awhile, recently shared his findings on how long it takes to get an ROI on a salesperson. His bold mathematical formula looks like this:
If you have a 12 month sales cycle and an 8 month learning curve, it will take nearly 2 years to get your new salesperson producing consistently. In that 2 years, maybe you’ll pay out close to $150,000 in subsidies.
Using your average margin, how much revenue must be gemerated to offset that subsidy?
How much revenue must be generated to produce a satisfactory ROI?
How long must the salesperson stick around in order to produce that ROI?
To bring it all back together, if a prospective sales candidate (who, for the sake of this blog post is unemployed) has found him/herself in a new sales role every 2-3 years, what are the odds that anyone who is hiring them is going to experience a positive ROI?
When we look at candidates through this lens we find it’s a lot easier to not find ourselves getting “sold” during an interview by someone who has all kinds of great excuses for why “things just didn’t work out” at that last job they were in…
Tags: A-Player, A-Players, bad hires, Baseline Selling, challenges of hiring salespeople, Dave Kurlan, hire better, hiring, hiring manager, Interview, Kurlan, mediocre salespeople, Objective Management Group, recruit don't absorb, Recruiting, recruiting salespeople, Salespeople, talent acquisition, unemployment, unemployment rate, virtual bench
Salespeople Part 2: Recruiters don’t get it either
I found myself sorting through DrudgeReport while in the President’s Club on my way home from San Francisco this afternoon. While reading an article about the Democratic Primaries, I saw a list of articles on the right hand nav bar and one of them looked intriguing. Its title: “Hiring Sales Superstars in 2008″. Considering the post from just the other day, I thought I’d take a gander and read through it quickly. Put lightly: it’s absolutely proof that recruiters are in the dark as much, if not more than, the business owners who are wondering how to hire top sales talent.
The article , which is really a poorly written advetorial sponsored by a search firm, offers bland examples of the “advice” that the president of the search firm gives her clients. They include: (a) don’t pay the same base salary in New York City as you would in Kansas and (b) only have A players involved in the interview because A players will hire other A players and my personal favorite (c) hire a good recruiter who will “hunt” for your talent and not post ads hoping that someone will reply.
Articles like this make me embarrassed for the recruiting profession. The saddest part, this article was probably written by someone who truly thought they were bringing value by offering this “advice” to others.
Tags: hiring, Kurlan, Predictable, Search Firm, Topgrading
Salespeople: Why are they an enigma?
We’ve spent the last couple of months getting very familiar with sales recruiting and doing a lot of research as we’re seeing a huge up-tick in the number of sales roles we’re being asked to handle. It’s interesting that during a time of economic slowdown, companies feel like they can do the exact same things as they’ve always done from a recruiting perspective – but just hire more salespeople in the hopes that they might have better success.
Albert Einstein said that the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and over again and expecting a different result. When it comes to sales recruiting – we feel like the time has come to make some changes.
The process that we feel like is far and away the best; it’s produced by the Objective Management Group. Dave Kurlan, the founder of the organization, wrote a book called Baseline Selling . His theories are simple: (a) if a salesperson thinks that $500 is a lot of money, how in the world are you going to get them to be successful at selling a $500,000 software package? (b) if a salesperson went to 8 car dealerships and researched online for 4 months and negotiated until he saved an extra $10 at one dealership over another, how can you convince them to not accept the statement “Let me think about it” from a prospect?
Dave’s got a great blog where he talks about his theories and views on the industry. My favorite line of his, “Chances are, the economy will loosen things up a little and there will be many more salespeople looking for positions as sales for products in their industries dry up. But employer beware, the first wave of available salespeople will usually be those that are least effective.”
This all brings me back to my original point: as the marketplace loosens up, and if you’re looking to hire new salespeople, make sure you’ve got a scorecard for measuring their past success, a process for really understanding what makes a prospective hire get up in the morning, and a compensation structure that guarantees that your top performers are paid what they deserve.
Tags: Baseline Selling, Kurlan, Salespeople, Scorecard


