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On the Job - The Prime Candidate
Posted By
Editor@TheTechMag.com
2001-10-31, 16:11:44 CST
In the Executive Search, the Channel Makes the
Choice
By Jim Leverette
While
most aspects of business today are driven by data
and technology, executive search still is thought
to be accomplished through a process akin to
alchemy. That, at least, is the popular
perception. Even senior executives who should know
better seem to believe that job candidates are
identified, courted, and selected in a manner that
owes more to Masonic ritual than to objective
research.
A typical executive search, according to this
school of thought, unfolds as follows. A company
board, a chief executive, or a venture capitalist
hands a search assignment off to an executive
search firm. A search consultant at the firm stirs
the names in its database around in a pot. Three
candidates, all of them with some personal
connection to either the search consultant or its
client company, rise to the surface. Interviews
are conducted with the three, though the winning
candidate is a forgone conclusion. It’s the guy
who played rugby with the venture capitalist or
the board member back at Dartmouth.
Reality? Sure. Occasionally. Very occasionally. In
99 cases out of 100, however, the process is
entirely different, and it pays to know this
whether you are seeking a job or seeking a
candidate.
The fact is, when executive search is conducted
correctly, it is a highly intensive,
research-based endeavor in which candidates are
selected not through personal connections but
through systematic research, guided by the
requirements of the executive search specification
and the business channel itself.
In the real world, a classic retained executive
search works like this. An executive search firm
is awarded an assignment whereby it is retained to
conduct a search to fill a specific position, let
us say a new CEO for an established technology
company.
Working with its client, the firm develops a
detailed executive search specification of the
position, which elaborates on all of the
responsibilities of the role and its primary
charter, in addition to the educational,
technical, management, and personal requirements.
The firm then conducts an inhouse proprietary
database review to cross-reference its network of
contacts developed through previous related search
work. It also considers the personal contacts of
its search consultants. After examining its
internal resources it comes up with, at best, an
initial starter list of contacts with which to
begin sourcing and networking. Significantly, no
resumes and no personal contacts match all of the
requirements of this particular position.
Matchmakers
Why? Because the opportunity is unique and because
no search firm or search consultant can know all
the candidates nationally or internationally who
may be right for the position. They will know a
few, but they may have to rule out these
candidates because they are locked into their
current positions or will not relocate for a
variety of personal or career related reasons.
So a true search has to begin. Advanced technology
is now available that progressive search firms can
use to develop original research on every public
and privately held company in the world. More
importantly, there is technology that can be used
to initiate, track, and drive progress that serves
as a project management tool in support of the
search process. In our hypothetical example, the
search firm will initially identify somewhere
between 40 to 60 companies in industries similar
to the client’s. These are the target companies
where the search firm will begin to seek likely
candidates. Most are domestic, several are
international.
Through cross-referencing its database and through
original research, the firm compiles an initial
sourcing/networking list of companies and
individuals. This list is then used to identify
and approach prospective candidates whose
backgrounds and business experience meet, and in
some cases may exceed, the executive search
specification. A list of more than 250 executives
is developed from the original starter list of
names, and the 40 to 60 firms that were identified
and subsequently added to during the course of the
search. Each of these executives is called in
turn. The details of every conversation are logged
into the database in order to track which are
viable candidates, which have referred other
candidates, and which are “dead ends” for the
purpose of this search. These calls generate the
names of another 250 executives who must be
called.
And the Process Continues …
In all, conversations with more than 500
individuals allow the search firm to take a
comprehensive snap-shot of the business channel
and determine who is the best potential fit for
the position. It then compiles a list of 10 to 12
potential candidates, all of whom closely match
the requirements of the position. After evaluating
the candidates’ background and experience, the
search consultant eliminates several from
contention based on a variety of factors, the main
one being a lack of necessary depth in certain
core competencies as called for in the executive
search specification.
The potential candidates remaining are placed into
a calibration matrix and a meeting is scheduled
with the client to provide updates on the progress
of the search, to review potential candidates
identified, and to evaluate market reaction and/or
possible issues that may impact the progress of
the search.
During this portion of the process, another two
candidates are eliminated by the search consultant
after comprehensive, in-depth and highly
structured interviews are conducted. As a part of
the due diligence process, facts surface about the
personal or professional dealings of these
candidates that raise red flags.
Three candidates are left standing. Not
coincidentally, these are the same three
individuals whose names have come up repeatedly
during the search. In the course of speaking with
executives within the clients’ business channel,
an increasing amount of evidence and testimony
suggests that these three are ideally suited to
the position. Subsequent interviews establish that
a particular candidate has created a strong
personal rapport with the individual most
responsible for the hiring. This candidate, though
previously unknown to the hiring authority, is
ultimately offered the opportunity.
In effect, neither the search consultant nor the
hiring executive initially selected the new CEO.
Rather, she was selected by the business channel
itself, in which she had established a reputation
for efficiency, vision, and leadership. Her name
surfaced in a research-driven executive search
that was systematic and industry-wide. Most of the
executives in the clients’ business channel
eventually came to know the search was taking
place and for whom. Finding and attracting the
appropriate candidates was strictly a matter of
investing the necessary time, effort, technology,
resources, and expertise. No alchemy. No voodoo.
No smoke and mirrors.
So while it is important to create a personal
career development network that includes peers and
members of the executive search community, it is
even more important to focus on achieving
excellence in your position and building a
reputation for impeccable standards and
uncompromising integrity and leadership. Do so and
you won’t have to look for the next step up in
your career. The business channel will find you.
Jim
Leverette is senior vice president and partner
of The Broadmoor Group, a Dallas-based global
executive search consultancy. You may contact
Jim at
jleverette@randall-james.com.
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