Originally posted by cannon999
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How much do agents take?
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Originally posted by Paralytic View Post
Yeah, because the only time an agency is ever incurring costs is during those few phone calls, right?
OP, the rate can also change too, eg, once, a contractors renewal puts them past, eg, the 2 year period at a client, the agency commission could drop from 10% to 5%.Comment
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Originally posted by cannon999 View Post
What other costs are we talking about here exactly? Putting up job adverts that cost a few quid? Paying a few quid to accountancy firms to keep track of the money being passed around? Don't make me laugh.
For the past 20+ years every year a set of contractors will set off and try to find a mechanism that allows them to bypass agencies.
And it always fails because most contractors have day jobs that mean they don't have the time spent ensuring they have the sheer number of contacts required to ensure you hear about a contract quickly enough.
The reality is that clients are happy to pay agents a fee for doing the job of finding decent candidates for them and we use agents because that is the cheapest way to find work
Now in theory you could create an electronic marketplace and that would allow end clients to bypass agencies but most end clients use agents because they can't afford to spend x days sanity checking all applicants, so they are happy to pay agents a 15% fee to do that work.
Last edited by eek; 5 November 2021, 12:17.merely at clientco for the entertainmentComment
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Originally posted by cannon999 View Post
What other costs are we talking about here exactly? Putting up job adverts that cost a few quid? Paying a few quid to accountancy firms to keep track of the money being passed around? Don't make me laugh.
Agents have to be paid, regardless of results. They get paid more if they have a result, but that comes out of their margin. 95% of cold calls get nowhere, that's wasted effort in terms of income. They also have to have a desk, a telephone, heat, light (not all of them work in caves) and secretarial support (someone has to do the reference chasing). Someone also has to find the clients and do all the donkey work to cover due diligence and getting on PSLs. Someone has to deal with stroppy contractors. Someone has to do the accounting. Someone has to do all the legal stuff (of which there are loads). someone has to recruit and manage the donkeys that we have to deal with. Someone has to pay for the advertising costs and licences for the two or three tools they use to post requirements to multiple boards.
I spent several years working with a couple of the big agencies on looking into setting up a viable, direct-to-client recruiting services. One thing that killed it off eventually was the overheads costs, which are several times more than most companies. You really have no idea.
Blog? What blog...?Comment
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Originally posted by cannon999 View PostI honestly don't know why companies don't do their own recruitment it seems much cheaper and effective given that every agent I have ever dealt with was useless.See You Next TuesdayComment
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Originally posted by cannon999 View Post
What other costs are we talking about here exactly? Putting up job adverts that cost a few quid? Paying a few quid to accountancy firms to keep track of the money being passed around? Don't make me laugh.
If they did go through all that hassle, they're not simply going to pay the contractor more they would pocket the difference for themselves, so as a contractor you would gain nothing if a client decided to bypass the agency.
I'm alright JackComment
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Originally posted by cannon999 View Post
What other costs are we talking about here exactly? Putting up job adverts that cost a few quid? Paying a few quid to accountancy firms to keep track of the money being passed around? Don't make me laugh.'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!Comment
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Originally posted by malvolio View PostThe agents don't take anything, you do.
Pretty much every customer will view the cost as a cost for the resource - including agency margin. Not an agency/recruitment cost.
Or, to put it another way, if the agent doesn't find the right resource, then there's no cost and they earn zilch. So we're very much enabling them to earn money, albeit in a symbiotic kind of way.Comment
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Before I worked in the recruitment sector I had a dim view of the charges. Not saying there aren't bad apples in the sector but it's a service and people pay because usually it's much cheaper to pay an agency than bring the resourcing, payroll and risk in-house. Efficiencies of scale and all that.
In terms of cost there are options - blind margin i.e. you quote a charge rate only, fixed mark up i.e. % of contractor cost or rate card - contractor pay varies by around £100 but the agency fee is the same. rates vary depending on sector, payment terms, volume etc.Comment
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Originally posted by vwdan View Post
I agree with everything you say apart from this bit - I know what you mean, but I always thought it was a pretty weak way of looking at it. Do agents add value - yes, I think that's undeniable. But, fundamentally, you could run a project with out them - you can't run a project without the contractors/staff.
Pretty much every customer will view the cost as a cost for the resource - including agency margin. Not an agency/recruitment cost.
Or, to put it another way, if the agent doesn't find the right resource, then there's no cost and they earn zilch. So we're very much enabling them to earn money, albeit in a symbiotic kind of way.'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!Comment
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