While this isn’t a problem unique to recruitment, it certainly is common. Stakeholder management to a point where everyone leaves a meeting knowing it was valuable is a learned skill, but the other factor is usually that everyone usually feels as though the onus is on the other to ensure they derive value. So, in recruitment, whose “job” is it? Well, it’s both.
To make recruitment updates most effective, both parties need to bring something to the table. As a hiring manager it's important that you set clear expectations on the information that's most valuable to the recruitment campaign. It's then the responsibility of your recruitment team to ensure that touchpoints are the most effective as possible, and result in the fastest possible time to hire. Whether you’re the hiring manager or recruitment partner, here’s how you should structure your expectations and what you should be prepared to give.
Your recruitment partner should regularly provide you with the latest metrics related to the search, including key information such as:
Stakeholder meetings are an essential part of your journey to building real credibility with your hiring teams, and ultimately the successful delivery of any recruitment campaign. You must be able to plan and execute an effective meeting, and these are some of the steps that you can take to set yourself up for success:
Most importantly, and this applies to both parties, ensure expectations are clear and laid out in the first meeting. Without ensuring both parties are aligned on what you expect to achieve from the outset, this can filter down throughout the entire recruitment campaign. The key is keeping meetings focused on the end goal, and recruiters can facilitate this by using data and remaining solutions orientated. This increases the likelihood of achieving the desired outcome of that important hire or hires, as well as creating highly effective long-term partnerships between hiring teams and recruitment partners.