2009 Job Search
With the current state of affairs in this country’s job market, it really is hard to believe that anyone is getting a job, not so much because of the unemployment rate, but because the process has become so arduous and ridiculous.
With all of our progress in technology, we seem to have further alienated prospective employers from prospective job seekers. Job seekers are shunned from calling employers, even their HR departments, which are partly in place to assist with the hiring process. Forget trying to speak with an actual hiring manager. He or she is like some mystery figure that only comes out after candidates have been prescreened, screened, and rescreened (kind of like a ritual cleansing). Sometimes candidates are even kept in the dark about to which company they are actually applying, only to be revealed at the last possible second (and then companies wonder, “why doesn’t the candidate seem to know much about us?”). And don’t get me started about online job posting sites that are nothing but black holes in which resume after resume just keeps going in. I mean, what are companies doing with all those resumes?
So in 2009 we are left with more and more reliance on the middle man to bridge that gap. Cue the recruiters, headhunters, employment agencies, etc.
Is that a bad thing? Sometimes, yes, because here again we have just another layer between the hiring company and the candidates.
The concept of recruiting seems simple enough on the surface. Company needs a strong candidate to fill a vacancy. Strong candidate needs a job. Recruiter plays matchmaker and brings the two parties together. Everybody’s happy, especially the recruiter who only gets paid when he or she sets up successful matches.
There is no question that it can be a very helpful service when everything goes right.
But all too often, everything does not go right. First you have candidates who seem to think that recruiters know about the bulk of available jobs out there and, more importantly, assist in placing candidates in any job they want. Second, you have recruiters who are only looking for the best possible fit for the positions they have been assigned to recruit for, which often is not the candidate who is contacting them. Instead, it may be the candidate who is currently employed and not really looking. Third, you have the companies who don’t always play by the rules. Put that all together, and you can end up with a mess.