What’s the difference between generalist and specialist recruitment?
The recruitment industry is a huge sector in the UK, employing many thousands of people. Recruitment agencies work with companies to find appropriate people for their roles and help individuals find their next job. Some agencies specialise in a single industry, such as healthcare or manufacturing, whereas others cover a much broader market, working with any local companies they can find.
Generalist recruitment
Generalist recruiters register candidates from all backgrounds and experience levels. However, looking for the right candidate for a particular job can be challenging and time-consuming, as you’ll need to look through a large pool of varied CVs and an extensive list of skills and experience that are not always relevant to the position you are looking to cover.
As a generalist recruiter, you work with clients from a wide range of industries, whose requirements can be anything from entry-level to managerial jobs. To understand a client’s requirements, one must learn about their company, the job role, the industry and the skills they need. While this is very interesting, the knowledge you gain of a particular industry tends to be superficial. Once you have placed a candidate, you will potentially move on to a different client from an other sector, meaning you will need to start the learning process all over again. Likely, you won’t work with highly-paid specialists, as they usually prefer to deal directly with specialist recruitment agencies.
Specialist recruitment
Specialist recruitment agencies work in a niche market, focusing on a specific industry, skill set or location. Whitehall Resources, for example, is a specialist recruitment agency that provides its clients with software system experts for their SAP, Oracle and IT job roles. These areas are further broken down into permanent and contract recruitment for each category and per country.
As a specialist recruiter, you connect with candidates and clients at a more in-depth level due to the knowledge you have about the industry, becoming an expert in what you do, enabling you to build stronger business relationships and becoming an advisor to your clients. You also work only with candidates with key characteristics your clients would be looking for.
In contrast with generalist recruitment, specialist recruiters manage their own clients throughout the whole recruitment process, especially when the role is as a 360° recruiter, in which you also search for new clients and build your own client portfolio.
Why clients prefer specialist recruiters
Specialist recruitment agencies build relationships with candidates with niche skills. Therefore companies looking for specific skill sets benefit from the niche pool of candidates a specialist can offer. They also benefit from expert advice, which can be particularly helpful when the clients aren’t in the industry. For example, if a warehousing company requires an IT manager, they might not know how to interview or test the IT knowledge of a candidate.
In contrast, the specialist recruiter would know precisely the skills and expertise the client requires for the role and can therefore advise them in that respect. They also gain access to what’s happening in the market as the recruiter will speak with hundreds of people in a month. They’ll be aware of projects that companies are working on, places where people might be moving to and from, and where the best people are currently working.
Why should you choose to be a specialist recruiter?
- You manage your own desk and your own clients. You actively seek new business and expand your client portfolio and enjoy the financial rewards as a result of your hard work.
- You become an expert and an adviser. Clients and candidates know you are the person to go to, that they can benefit from your experience and knowledge, and that you are able to deliver the results they need.
- You build strong relationships with candidates in your industry. Candidates trust you and become familiar with you, they contact you when looking for a job and can give you useful information about the industry and ongoing projects or company changes.
- If you work with highly-experienced candidates in a specialist agency like Whitehall, your commission is a percentage of a contract of high value, which consequently means you have higher earnings.