7 Things Recruiters Do that Irritate Me

When I first started my site it was to put an end to the frustration and stigma attached to what I do. Thus the title The Anti Pimp.
Below is a blog entry from one of my long time consultants/technical contacts. I’ve known him long enough to be able to call him my friend also. I can admit that at the beginning of my career when I all I had in my eyes were $$, I may have be guilty of one if not all of these accusations.
To all of you “industry” folk – 99% of what’s said below is sometimes true….but putting your head in the sand isn’t going to change a thing. You are fooling yourself if you don’t listen to what your candidates have to say. Stop being a pimp, handler, broker, body shop. Do your job like it should be done and stop being a shit head.
So come on and chick-ity-check yo self before you wreck yo self - Ice Cube – 1993
(edited for and by TheAntiPimp)
From an entry entitled: 7 Things Recruiters Do That Irritate Me
“Before getting into this post, I think I should state that there are recruiters I truly respect and like and recruiters that I do not respect and probably would not like even if I knew them. This post is about the later category, which I feel are the lazy recruiters who add no value to the candidate-employer relationship.
I got a call today from a recruiter who I would have loved to strangle, if it was only possible to do so over the phone. So here is my list of the top things that irritate me, which I am sure also irritate others. The first three come from my caller this morning, who I will affectionately call Mr. Lazy.
- Ringing my phone over and over again until I answer – This was the issue number one when I talked to Mr. Lazy this morning. If you are going to call my line seven times in a row, my house had better be on fire. I realize this may seem like an emergency to you, but it is not my emergency.
- Being rude to me on the phone – This was issue number 2 with Mr. Lazy today. I know saying “no, you have to listen now” might be polite talk wherever you are from, but it is consider rude where I’m fronm. It is consider ultra-rude in the south, where I current reside. I am sorry I hung up on you today, which was also rude, but when I tell you I don’t have time to talk, send me an email or give me a call back later. Do not assume your time is more important than mine and I have to listen to you this moment. The message it sends to me is you are smiling and dialing for dollars and not trying to add any value to the proposition.
- Being rude to my wife on the phone – Once again, I realize you might come from a place where you can be rude to your wife whenever you want, but it does not mean you can be rude to mine. Of course, she is perfectly capable of giving you a tongue lashing and then hanging up on you, so feel free Mr. Lazy. And, yes, this HAS happened in the past.
- Emailing me numerous times for the same position – This was issue number 3 with Mr. Lazy. I know it takes a little bit of time, but when you go from Monster to Dice to Career Builder, check and see if you already sent me an email. Otherwise, you are showing me how lazy you are and I would rather talk to a recruiter I know and trust about the position than you. NOTE: I can generally figure out who the company is by looking at your req; if not, I will call someone I trust and ask them if they can figure it out. I am NOT going to call YOU.
- Not reading my resume – When you call me or email me based solely on buzzwords, chances are you have something wrong. Yes, I know you have a lovely entry level .NET position you need to fill, but I am not going to work for $25 an hour 1099 or corp-to-corp. Don’t waste my time.
- Not reading my location preferences – yes, I realize that there are jobs that are too good to pass up, no matter where they are located. In general, these jobs have a greater than $250k/year salary ($500k/year for California ;->), moving allowance, and no cost health benefits. Yes, I am being a bit ridiculous, but I am not moving for $45 per hour 1099 or corp-to-corp. I can make that here without any headaches. Now, if you have that $1 million per annum, plus bonus, plus moving expenses, plus no-cost benefits, I might even be interested in going to Greenland for a few years.
- Having me do your job for you – I am far along in my career, I should not have to spend an hour answering email questions for you to send my resume to your client. You should be able to do the work to figure out if I am the right person to talk to.
On point #7, the email today had the following questions and answers, most of which can be determined by READING my resume.
1) Full Name:
2) Present location:
3) Contact Details:
4) INS Status:
5) Availability:
6) Total IT Experience:
7) Total US Experience:
8) Ready to Relocate (Yes / NO):
9) Expected Compensation:
10) Comfort levels (on a scale of 1[Least] to 10[High])
§ OO Design and Analysis
§ .Net
§ C#
§ SharePoint
§ Silverlight
§ Web Services
$ Messaging Framework
§ PL/SQL (Oracle)
§ UML
§ Design Patterns
11) Interview Preferred Timings :
12) Do you bear the needed years experienced
§ OO Design and Analysis 5
§ .Net (C#, Sharepopint) 3
§ Silverlight 1+
§ Web Services & Messaging Framework 2
§ PL/SQL (Oracle) 2
§ UML 2
§ XML 2
BTW, this is not the worst one I have seen.
I was asked by a friend, who is a recruiter, why so many developers hate recruiters. I told him it was because recruiters were not earning their keep. This is not true of all of them, but there are some who are absolutely wasting my time, and the time of others, to try to make a quick buck. If you want to place me, and do not have a dream job, then you should at least take a few minutes to figure out if I am even qualified or would be remotely interested.
For the recruiter friends I have in the area (and some outside the area), I am not talking about you here. Yes, there are some developers that view all every recruiter as scum, but you know I am not one of them. I do have a problem, however, with recruiters that are nothing more than human search engines, as they take way too much of my money for no added value.”
_______________________
I’ve chosen not to publish his name on purpose. So put that in your pipe and smoke it.








June 4th, 2009 at 7:20 pm
Unfortunately since the Indian time share salesmen have seem to have discovered recruiting, the above is more the rule than the exception. I have almost gotten to the point I will not answer the phone if it is out of my area code or one I don’t recognize. I REALLY do not need someone that speaks English only marginally better than a 2 year old demanding I drop what I am doing, run to the computer and look at the email they sent me about an out of state, 3 month contract, doing something I have not done in over 10 years for 1/2 the going rate.
June 7th, 2009 at 8:20 am
Very well said – to both the writer and avatar42 above. I have great working relationships with several recruiters. When the time comes for me to find a new position or project to work on it usually just takes a few phone calls to get placed. However, an update on Dice will usually land twenty or thirty phone calls from the same Indian salesmen. I have a rule of thumb whenever I’m on the search: If I answer the phone and they cannot pronounce my name, I get off the phone as quickly as possible.
June 8th, 2009 at 10:44 am
Wow the edits here are brutal. My reply was about 4 times as long what was posted. My main peeves about all the “fake” jobs being posted and being grilled for manager contact info was cut. Not to mention that posting on a job site gets you onto spam lists and posting to Career Builder gets you calls from scammers on top of the spam.
Anyway yeah I have a few recruiters I regularly work with too. Problem is right now a lot of the recruiters I have worked with in the past are MIA and the rest do not seem to have more than 1 or 2 jobs. It is like pulling teeth to get the name of the client from most to even know if you have been submitted already to that company much less that on that job. Normally I would not deal with anyone like that but 4 months into unemployment and looking at losing your house makes you put up with a lot.
June 10th, 2009 at 6:38 am
How about when you get an email telling you that you might be interested in this position and oh, BTW, here’s the link, take a look at the requirements to see if you’re qualified and then get back to the recruiter.
Ummm. If I’m not qualified, then why did I get this email?
June 17th, 2009 at 10:31 am
Those are good leads to call a recruiter you know to see if they if they can submit you on it. Of course these days many of those are for random words on your resume. Like if QA appears anywhere on your resume you will get emails about tester positions. Often out of state and for less than 1/3 of what you have been making. The REAL joy is how many of these emails now are just spam trying to get you to click a link to a new job site with out of date info harvested from a few other job sites. I’m getting more of those coming from the local JUG jobs list than real jobs lately. But then those are not recruiters.
Expect to see more “Exclusive Right to Submit” forms in the future. As I understand it companies are getting fed up with all the multiple submittals from these fly-by-night recruiting firms. They are having to toss out way to many resumes to avoid getting tangled up in disputes. I have even heard stories some of these recruiters will submit you even if you tell them you have been submitted just to knock you out of the pool. I do not know this has happened to me but from some of the ones that have talked to, I would tend to believe it. This year alone for me 130 submits yielding only 7 interviews and I have been programming over 24 years. The last 10 with Java. I know there are a lot of us out of work but that is still statistically WAY off.
One bright spot. Not sure why but several of the jobs I submitted on in April all of a sudden I am getting calls on to see if I am still available. Only 1 interview scheduled so far so I cannot say for sure who much is real activity versus recruiters looking busy but it is at least something.
June 22nd, 2009 at 7:35 pm
[...] of my more recent articles was written by a long time technical contact and friend of mine titled “7 Things That Recruiters Do To Irritate Me”. Apparently it wasn’t clear who actually wrote the “meat” of that posting but [...]
June 23rd, 2009 at 2:47 pm
#4 just happened to me. Like in the last five minutes. I just got an email about a job that I’ve already interviewed for (and got turned down) from the guy who set up the interview.
June 23rd, 2009 at 2:56 pm
amazing how dumb some people are eh??
June 23rd, 2009 at 3:32 pm
It’s one thing if someone forgets your name or something after a couple weeks or a month, but this dude said I was out of the running less than 24 hours ago.
July 1st, 2009 at 2:45 pm
guys! why dont you just call the company yourself? No point in asking a recruiter to submit you. Who wants to pay a 60-80% markup for your services. Id rather just payroll you and save tons of money for my company.
Come on, lets keep it easy!