Advantages And Disadvantages: A Retained Tax Recruiter, A Contingency Recruiter, Or A Tax Executive Search On Your Own

Advantages And Disadvantages: A Retained Tax Recruiter, A Contingency Recruiter, Or A Tax Executive Search On Your Own

After thirty years and more than one thousand tax executive searches, we have learned quite a few lessons in the tax executive search profession. This article is about the lessons we have learned repeatedly. By learning these lessons in advance, you will benefit from this knowledge on your next tax executive search. As CFOs work to contain costs at multinational organizations, they often minimize recruiting fees in their tax department budgets. This is a costly mistake in the long run because a company blocks their access to an extraordinary pool of tax professional talent that does not submit their resume to an online ad or a company portal. The reason is they desire greater privacy when considering a new tax opportunity. There is a big difference in the talent pool available to a company when they retain a recruiter to go out and conduct a thorough search of the marketplace for talented tax executive candidates over see what you can catch from an ad approach.

There is a positive impact on an organization who chooses to conduct a thorough search by an experienced tax recruiter, versus conducting a search on your own. There is a difference in tax savings to an organization when they invest in attracting the best. Investing in your tax team will have a positive financial impact on your company. The CFOs I have worked with over the years who treat their tax executives like Gods and Goddesses are saving millions(billions) of dollars to the company bottom line every year. CFOs supporting their tax leaders with the staff and budget they need to operate successfully are knocking it out of the ballpark with home runs.

Conducting A Tax Executive Search On Your Own

Yes, it is a time-consuming process to conduct a thorough tax executive search on your own. You interview what comes to you through an online ad sourced by your in-house human resources department or referrals from friends in another corporation, public accounting and law firms.

Do you really have the extra time to research, and call prospective tax candidates about your tax opportunity? Most do not have the time to take on these extra responsibilities. It is a herculean task  to conduct a thorough search of the market to find the the best of the tax profession to speak with you about this role in your organization.

Will you ask questions that help you make better decisions during the interview process? There is information an experienced recruiter will uncover that would generally not come up in an interview with a key decision maker. For example, a recruiter will ask questions like “What is your current relationship with your boss?” The candidate will likely not tell you they have a strained relationship with their boss(this is good for the recruiter to learn because it signifies they have a real motivation to move). Another example, is the candidate is engaged and wants to take a month off during busy season deadline to have a wedding and a honeymoon. Ah! ( A good recruiter will advise the candidate your future boss needs to know this information).  How about the fact a candidate interviewing tells the recruiter they are pregnant?  Always tell a potential employer you will need time off for your new child. I have personally placed many pregnant ladies and the people who hired them were wonderful to work for!  Did you even ask the tax candidate if they would take a counteroffer from their current employer? Then you discover after making an offer in writing their current boss is their best friend and will likely make them a counteroffer to stay. An experienced recruiter will ask a candidate if they would ever take a counteroffer from their current employer. It is more than likely, you will not learn this information screening on your own.

There are many secrets candidates keep from a company they are interviewing with, and it is up to the experienced tax recruiter to learn as much as possible about a candidate’s need and motivation in making a move to an organization. An expert tax recruiter will understand if the clients and candidates’ professional goals and expectations are compatible. There are many questions we ask tax candidates that a company representative would never ask, and it is what makes an experienced tax recruiter a better screener to protect the clients’ interests. You work with the tax recruiter to discover more information about the person you decide to make an offer to. You ensure higher results in the quality of tax professionals you hire when partnering with an experienced tax recruiter.

Using A Contingency Recruiter To Conduct A Tax Executive Search

Although we do not do contingency search, I started out as a young contingency tax recruiter straight out of college, so I know the pain of contingency recruiting well. I would be at my desk working and a prospective client calls you and says “ Kat(Kitty), I want to ask you to look through your files and send me any resumes you have that would fit my open tax position.” When I did not know any better early on in my career, I would spend time calling, recruiting and screening candidates for a role; and ask candidates for permission to send their resume to a client. Any recruiter who sends a resume without getting the candidate’s permission first is not a recruiter you should be working with because it is unprofessional! What if this tax candidate has already sent their resume to the client or given another recruiter permission to represent them to a client? Sending a candidate’s resume to a client without getting the tax candidate’s permission(in every instance) is reckless and hurts candidates when they are double presented by two different firms. It is a big no-no! Many companies will pass on a double presented tax candidate to avoid problems with search firm contingency fees. Another thing that happens to contingency tax recruiters is they often get ghosted by what they thought were a trusted client relationship. They spend weeks, or months, researching and identifying tax candidates for a company and then the person hiring does not return their calls. This greatly affects hard-working recruiters who are investing their time in their hiring authorities needs.

Contingency recruiting agreements have put many recruiters out of business altogether. Contingency recruiters also compete with human resource representatives who often prefer the company hire the tax candidates they source for the company, over the option of paying a recruiter fee. During my three decades in tax executive search, I have been a witness to numerous companies who hired tax candidates that were not as strong technically or interpersonally as the tax candidates we presented. The company avoided paying a recruiter fee but paid in higher taxes down the road by not hiring the most technically competent talent in the tax profession. I have been a witness to companies hiring candidates with well-known personality issues and poor technical skills hired because they found a candidate on their own. Great tax candidates do not just submit a resume via an online advertisement; you must research the market for these great talents; you must use sharp interviewing and screening skills; you must ask them what they love about doing taxes; you must ask then to speak with your clients because they were no even looking for another opportunity when you called them. I can tell if a tax candidate loves what they do, they love to talk about the technically sexy tax strategies they develop. They are super motivated to save millions of tax dollars for their companies and they love working in tax. Thy tell me it is like figuring out a big complex puzzle with big tax savings for their companies.

Another thing you should consider is a contingency recruiter is not married to your project. They can easily will adjust the amount of effort they put into your search when working for free. You do not own a contingency recruiters time. A contingency recruiter will work on the searches where the fees are higher. If your company is offering a contingency recruiter a 20% fee and another project is a 25% fee and a third project is a 30% fee, and a fourth project pays 33%, the recruiter will focus on the higher fee project. You may think they are working on your search, but they are focusing on other projects that pay higher fees. Understand you are asking a contingency to work for free, so there is no solid commitment on their part to utilize their time for your project.

You Benefit Having The Smartest Tax Experts Working For Your Company

We are in a time in history where local, state, federal and international tax revenue authorities are looking for new ways to increase revenue by taxing everything. Government authorities are raising tax revenue on anything they can think of. You need to retain the best of the tax profession in your organization or the revenue authorities will roll right over you. Top performing tax teams who are compensated well save companies millions, and in some cases billions of dollars that would be lost to tax authorities forever. Personally, I love recruiting for companies whose management is highly supportive of their tax organizations. It is a fact that companies who have a great partnership between the tax executive leader and the CFO are saving companies millions and billions of dollars. These CFOs do not make any business decisions without consulting their tax executive leaders first!

Recently, Yankees Star Aaron Judge hit his 300th home run in 955 games. He is a star athlete for the Yankees franchise. With a multi-year contract paying him 40 Million per year(that works out to $70,000 per bat), the franchise made an investment in him. We thoroughly enjoy recruiting for companies who invest in finding the best tax athletes.  Over the years, the clients who retained us to recruit the very best tax athletes are also knocking it out of the ballpark because they are committed to hiring the best of the profession:
https://etsearch.com/retained-tax-executive-search/

Retaining An Experienced Tax Recruiter To Identify And Screen Tax Athletes For You

It is important to understand when you retain a tax recruiter, a retained recruiter is responsible for working on your search every day from day one when the contract is signed, the retainer is paid, an agreed number of qualified tax candidates are presented, and an offer is made and accepted. You own the time of the person you retain to conduct a tax search. They are retained to work on your search daily to completion. Companies who retain a tax recruiter, owns the recruiters time,  and ensures the recruiters time is spent on finding tax candidates for their tax job.

Retained executive tax search is a very deliberate process with multiple steps involved to be successful. Although I list 30 Steps on our search site:
https://etsearch.com/retained-tax-executive-search/ there are often another 100 twists and turns in identifying and screening for candidates to consider a new opportunity with your company.

The tax executives we introduce to clients are gainfully employed, not out actively looking at other tax opportunities, until we approach them privately about speaking with our clients. We are experts at identifying, recruiting, and introducing tax executive candidates that companies generally would not have access to on a search until they retain our tax search services.

To access the best possible tax executive candidate pool, you must have a written job description and a written marketing letter to market to a targeted tax audience. The marketing letter we write for clients has more sizzle to attract candidates. For example, if a company has a tax executive retiring in a year or two, you will want to state this in your marketing letter to inform prospects this person will be groomed for the lead tax executive role. If you do not want to advertise this fact, then it is up to the retained tax recruiter to provide this insight privately. We also have many clients who want to keep their tax executive search private for a variety of reasons.

One of the most time-consuming responsibilities of a retained tax recruiter is to conduct thorough research on all tax candidates with the requisite skills to do the job; then to cold call and discuss the opportunity with highly targeted tax executive candidates. In order to find the best in the tax profession, you must reach out and privately approach rock star tax candidates in a highly professional manner. You cold call and have a private conversation with tax executives about anything that would motivate them to privately consider the tax role with your client. This is how we surface an extraordinary talent pool to introduce to our clients.

You then need to understand motivation; what motivation does a tax professional have to consider another opportunity (i.e. not enough interaction with their boss, they feel they are undercompensated, they feel underappreciated, they do not have enough support to hire more tax staff, they are overworked, they currently have a long commute, prefer to work remote, etc..). Every professional has something that motivates them to consider another opportunity; it is up to the experienced tax recruiter to understand their motivation is to consider the new tax opportunity. Without motivation, they will have no good reason to change their professional life.

One of the biggest problem areas encountered by companies without retaining an experienced tax recruiter is losing a great tax executive interest during salary negotiations. Tax candidates are  uncomfortable discussing and negotiating their compensation with potential employers.  Many have told me so over the years how uncomfortable they are negotiating their salaries with a potential employer. An experienced tax recruiter is your biggest asset to securing an offer acceptance. The recruiter should consult with the tax executive to discuss current compensation and what it would take for them to say yes to the new opportunity (if the client decides to make an offer). If the tax executive candidate would not accept an offer at the compensation the company is considering, this needs to be worked out before any offer is made in writing. Many deals fall apart at this stage, and it is to the benefit of the client to have a middle person involved to smooth things over.

Baseball player Aaron Judge had a bigger offer to go to San Diego Padres. but he took an offer several million less with the Yankees. Although I do not know what motivated him to take the lesser contract with the New York Yankees, something other than money motivated him. Although he grew up in California, he had his own motivation for taking the lower offer with the New York Yankees. When you are talking a difference of 360M contract versus a 400M contract, his motivation was not money.

What do you think his motivation was… sports fans?

Kat Jennings, CEO TaxConnections 858.999.0053

Need to retain a tax recruiter? Contact kat@etsearch.com to set up a time to talk or call 858.232.4415

Kat Jennings, Founder of ET Search LLC offering retained tax search services and TaxConnections Inc., the leading tax professional branding platform. Through ET Search LLC, we provide: 1) Internationally recognized, retained executive tax search services for multinational corporations, public accounting firms, and law firms; and through TaxConnections: 2) Provide brand building services to expand the reach of tax professionals and their firms.

The tax candidates we introduce to clients are hidden and will never submit a resume through a resume portal tracking their activity. This leaves an underground population of tax candidates inaccessible to most companies who seek technically sophisticated tax executives for their open tax roles.

As a globally recognized consultant to multinational organizations, accounting firms, and law firms searching for tax expertise, Kat has been retained by public accounting firms, law firms, and corporations worldwide including Apple Computer, AC Neilson, Accenture, Agilent Technologies, Allergan, Alza, American Express, American Media, Aon, Baker & McKenzie, Barclays Bank, Bechtel, Cargill, Carl Zieuss Vision, Century Aluminum, Chevron, Clorox, Citigroup, Commercials Metals, Constellation Energy, Countrywide, Del Monte, Deloitte Touche, DFS, DLA Piper, E&J Gallo Winery, Electronic Arts, Ernst &Young, Fox Entertainment, Fremont Investments, General Electric, General Motors, Herbalife, Hewlett Packard, Hyatt, Intel, Jones Lang LaSalle, Kimco Realty, KLA Tencor, Koch Industries, KPMG, Levi Strauss, Liberty Mutual, LKQ, Loews, Logitech, Lucas Film, Maersk, McKesson, Nalco, Newell Rubbermaid, Nissan, Oracle, Orbitax, Pacific Gas & Electric, PwC, QAD, SAIC, SanDisk, Sanmina, Sempra Energy, SONY, Synopsys, Ticketmaster, Trimble Navigation, Toyota, Univar, Wells Fargo, Vertex, Yahoo, Xilinx, and many more not listed here.

Learn how we operate at https://etsearch.com/retained-tax-executive-search/

Contact Kat at 858,999.0053 Office/858.232.4415 Cell or kat@etsearch.com to request a private consultation about a search.

Join us as a TaxConnections Member to expand your brand. https://www.taxconnections.com/membership/sign-up

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