Sometimes a recruiter or a recruiting agency of one type or another
is an option for some people, but not for everyone. However, before that, it
should be understood there are many different kinds of recruiting services and many
of them have nothing to do with recruiting
people and professionals. Instead, most people who today call themselves
recruiters are merely casting a fish net; posting a job description, then
collecting, collating and filing respondents’ resumes into a database for use
now or in the future. So they are more appropriately online resourcing and not actually recruiting. Rather,
many should literally call themselves placement
agencies, as they sometimes place those they’ve resourced. If you think about
it, it would actually be a good way to market their services and not look and
sound like everyone else - but I digress.
If or whenever you may choose to utilize third party help,
it does not mean you can or should forego your own efforts. If you are working
with a real recruiter, who is proactive on your behalf, coordinate your efforts
with them. But if it is an agency that predominantly boasts a database, which
is where your resume will end up, you’d better not stop your own separate
efforts. Sometimes I think a recruiter can be helpful but, regardless, my blog
entries and articles are meant to teach you to help yourself and not have to
rely on others. After all, that is the whole point of empowering oneself, is it
not, for self-sufficiency. From experience, I can tell you that anyone who
seeks the help of others and then sits back and does nothing, expecting someone
else to do everything for you, is either lazy or naïve.
Seeking and getting help is fine and can add a dimension to
your efforts; thinking someone else will do it for you is a losing strategy.
Well said "to enable people to more adequately go directly to the source, as it were... ", helpful post, thanks!
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