It's not abuse, it's honest opinion based on too many years fighting the system! And I did say I didn't mean it personally. 
I know of agents that do the job the old-fashioned way, but as soon as you get into the realms of the big boy agencies they become ineffective for the purely commercial reasons I pointed out. Plus it's got too easy with the meta-engines like Broadbean scattering job adverts to the world in fifteen seconds; where is the incentive to apply any thought, far simpler to let the candidates come to you and pick the first three.
I agree the industry needs regulating. APSCo are a joke and REC is largely ineffective despite its best efforts. Like PCG battling the ICT war, the opposing vested interests are too strong and are dictating the market.
But the agencies can help themselves - and us - a lot more than they do. My last gig came about because the agent actually read the CV properly, having had previous candidates bounced as unsuitable, and passed it on even though it missed some of the key criteria. He had enough nous to realise that the business skills I offered were far more relevant that my sector history. And sorry, but as long as you have researchers in the loop, you are not going to be able to do that.
The agencies I get on well with are the ones where the agent making the decisions answers the phone and has the time to talk. Too many of your co-workers are simply disinterested in doing that little thing...
ps:
Attitude - I never have a problem with this and am always professional (bulletin boards and Malvolio are not my professional persona by a long way!)
Cultural match (and yes, we can tell) - Agreed, but I've worked successfully in several adifferent industries and usually fit in.
Skills - I'm more manager than technician these days, but personally I only ever apply for roles I know I have the abilities to deliver - based, of course, on whatever garbled details the job advert gives...
Experience - more than most and it's not 1 year experience 15 times either.
Previous history of delivery/completion - never yet failed to deliver the objective nor missed a deadline, not exceeded a set budget.
Cost - the real myth. Last gig I charged them around £60k and saved them around £480k. So what's the relevance of the day rate?

I know of agents that do the job the old-fashioned way, but as soon as you get into the realms of the big boy agencies they become ineffective for the purely commercial reasons I pointed out. Plus it's got too easy with the meta-engines like Broadbean scattering job adverts to the world in fifteen seconds; where is the incentive to apply any thought, far simpler to let the candidates come to you and pick the first three.
I agree the industry needs regulating. APSCo are a joke and REC is largely ineffective despite its best efforts. Like PCG battling the ICT war, the opposing vested interests are too strong and are dictating the market.
But the agencies can help themselves - and us - a lot more than they do. My last gig came about because the agent actually read the CV properly, having had previous candidates bounced as unsuitable, and passed it on even though it missed some of the key criteria. He had enough nous to realise that the business skills I offered were far more relevant that my sector history. And sorry, but as long as you have researchers in the loop, you are not going to be able to do that.
The agencies I get on well with are the ones where the agent making the decisions answers the phone and has the time to talk. Too many of your co-workers are simply disinterested in doing that little thing...
ps:
Attitude - I never have a problem with this and am always professional (bulletin boards and Malvolio are not my professional persona by a long way!)
Cultural match (and yes, we can tell) - Agreed, but I've worked successfully in several adifferent industries and usually fit in.
Skills - I'm more manager than technician these days, but personally I only ever apply for roles I know I have the abilities to deliver - based, of course, on whatever garbled details the job advert gives...
Experience - more than most and it's not 1 year experience 15 times either.
Previous history of delivery/completion - never yet failed to deliver the objective nor missed a deadline, not exceeded a set budget.
Cost - the real myth. Last gig I charged them around £60k and saved them around £480k. So what's the relevance of the day rate?






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