You’ve got a good client base. Your candidates know you well. You have relationships with a number of job boards, and your LinkedIn profile is up to date. You’re accessible, you answer all your emails and phone calls. You can take a brief from a client and find them the perfect candidate in a short space of time. As far as recruitment goes, you’ve got every box ticked. Right?
…perhaps not quite.
The thing is, when it comes to working as a solo recruiter there seems to be less competition surrounding you. You’re not in a busy office filled with other consultants, listening to them speak to clients and candidates on the phone all day, and watching them make placements and collect their bonuses. The competitive side to recruitment is completely removed when you work by yourself because you aren’t immediately surrounded by your competition.
But that doesn’t mean it’s not there.
Knowing and monitoring who you are up against might seem like an unnecessary task on your never-ending to-do list, but, trust us, it’ll give you an advantage in the long run. Take a look on LinkedIn – don’t just look at recruitment company profiles, but also individual recruiters who work in similar sectors and on similar roles to you. What kind of content are they sharing? How often do they engage with their connections and wider audience? All of this is part of building relationships and their personal brand.
You don’t need to copy anything and everything your competitors are doing online, but it’s useful to see what they’re doing. If you’ve been unsure about how and why managing your personal brand is so important as a recruiter, seeing conversations happening in the industry you work in, with potential clients and candidates you could be working with, might give you a taste of why online engagement is so important.
Working as a solo recruiter is busy enough as it is; if you’re a one-man band, managing your social accounts and creating your own content might seem a bit far-fetched. However, the solution is simple – commit to specific days and times to share content or to have conversations with people online and stick to it.
Start off with identifying when you will have time to share content and where you want to do it. Do you have time to record a quick video of you talking about upcoming roles that you’re working on? Or do you have the time to dedicate to writing a blog once a month? The thought of creating content is often a lot more overwhelming than creating the content itself.
Here’s an idea of a weekly content schedule for recruiters to build their personal brand:
Of course, this is an example of how it could look – it is subject to change every week, depending on your schedule. But no matter how it looks for you personally, finding a few minutes here and there each day, or an hour or so a week each week (if possible), will make all the difference.
Making your face and name recognisable on LinkedIn to clients and customers is extremely valuable in recruitment. Recruiters who use social media as part of their sales techniques outsell 78% of their peers – not only are you creating a reliable and trustworthy brand for yourself, but you are getting ahead of your competition in the process.