How Executive Recruiters Actually Find Candidates (And How to Get on Their Radar)
Most executives think the recruiter-candidate relationship works like a job board: you submit, they review, you hear back. It almost never works that way at
As a team of executive search consultants, we are constantly using LinkedIn to source candidates. Together with our researchers, we look for specific keywords, commonalities, and direct connections.
If you want to be found on LinkedIn, your profile should give sufficient information regarding your background. Executive search consultants and hiring managers will search by keywords and scan your profile to see what specific skills are aligned with certain jobs. Similar to a resume, you want to have your employment history – role, company, tenure, responsibilities – listed and up to date. Try listing specific projects you have worked on and providing something more substantial than your run-of-the-mill summary. Give such projects depth and meaning by including numbers, like a dollar value or number of employees involved.
If you are an engineer, we want to see if you have semi-conductor experience. If you are an architect, we want to know if you have high-rise experience. Spotlight what is unique and sets you apart from your peers. Reid Hoffman, LinkedIn’s co-founder recently said, “With my profile, I look at who I want to target and have my profile appeal to.” If you can’t be unique, you can at least offer lure.
Include your education, awards, and non-profit or extracurricular activities. LinkedIn is a virtual resume and you are at anyone’s fingertips, so be sure to put your best profile forward.
Once your profile is ready, use your network!
Interact with them, don’t just be static. Reach out to recruiters or people who are within your field. Be in the know of what is going on in your industry. Being active on LinkedIn is just as important to your networking strategy as what your profile showcases.
Here are several tips my colleagues and I share all the time:
As you engage with your network, they feel as if they know you. They have a better understanding of your background, skills, interests, and knowledge base in your industry. All of which helps put you in good position for recruiters like us to come across your profile. Plus it will encourage others to reply to you when you reach out to them.
To get the most out of LinkedIn be sure to put together your best profile, personal brand, be engaging, and get out there and network.
Most executives think the recruiter-candidate relationship works like a job board: you submit, they review, you hear back. It almost never works that way at
A conversation with executive search consultant José Ruiz of Alder Koten on how board expectations have shifted, why most outreach fails, and what actually gets