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Following Up With New Hires Is Essential To Building Better Client Relationships

by Beverly Aarons 27. April 2010 08:25

A recruiter’s job does not end once the hiring is done.  The first 30 to 45 days after a candidate is hired is the most critical period of time for not just the candidate but for the recruiter.  It is in that 30 to 45 days that that many new hires quit or are fired.  As a recruiter, losing candidate to attrition during that critical 30 to 45 days won’t bode well for their relationship with the client/employer.  Don’t let all of your recruiting efforts go to waste by losing a client’s new hire to attrition so quickly, take the time to follow up with the new hire and the hiring manager to make sure the new employee is adjusting well to their new job. If your fail to follow up with new hires and hiring managers after you have placed a candidate you are basically taking a gamble.  While in the majority of the cases the new hire will adjust well in that first 30 to 45 days, there will always be at least 10 percent of the placements that fail with no follow-up on the part of the recruiter.  A recruiter can help to minimize their placement failure rate by checking in on the new hire and the hiring manger.  Here’s what you should ask new hires and hiring managers:

  1. What are the things you like best about your job (new hire)?
  2. What are the things you like least about your job (new hire)?  
  3. What are the things you like best about how you are being managed? (new hire only)
  4. What are the things you like least about how you are being managed? (new hire only)
  5. What are some things you would like to see your new hire do that they are not already doing?


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