|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Recently we concluded the placement of a Senior Sales Representative for a publicly traded company. The role was ripe with potential as the company products were being widely embraced by current and new customers. The recruiting process went smoothly as the candidate progressed through several rounds of face to face interviews with company executives.
At the conclusion of the final interview, our candidate was pulled aside by his prospective boss, the Vice President of Sales. Substantive conversation took place as the candidate and prospective employer agreed upon the terms of a potential offer. The candidate and prospective employer spent approximately 30 minutes discussing in detail the offer terms: base compensation, commission schedule, profit sharing and bonuses, insurance coverage, car allowance, expense account and other related matters. At the end of the conversation, the candidate and the prospective employer shook hands to "seal the deal". The VP of Sales told him that their HR Director would follow up with him in the next "few days" with an "official offer letter".
Four business days later, the candidate called me. I could tell this normally cool and collected sales professional was a bit flustered. He had not heard anything from the company or their respective HR Director. What should he do? Should he call directly? Was that making him look too eager? Was the deal off? Our candidate was now in "Offer Letter Limbo". Offer Letter Limbo occurs when the candidate waits and waits for a company to take the action of creating and sending him a formal offer letter of employment. Jobseekers can avoid Offer Letter Limbo by following a few simple steps:
1. If you do not sense continuity, create it on your own. Smaller and even medium sized companies sometimes suffer from a lack of continuity in the hiring process. After your interview, and especially one like our candidate experienced where an actual verbal offer has been made, be certain to follow up the next day with written communication to the participants. If a verbal offer has been made, be certain to reconfirm the terms and parameters of the offer in writing to the person extending the offer. Make certain that your communication reflects your commitment and desire. Set a specific time period in which you anticipate hearing from them back in writing. Remove any possible obstacles to communicating with you by giving the employer various methods to reach you directly and conveniently.
2. If you have not done so already, open a channel of communication with the HR department. Make an inquiry with your prospective boss as to who will be handling or coordinating the creation of an offer letter. Follow up, preferably via telephone, to reconfirm your interest in working for the company and your anticipation in receiving the formal offer letter. Knowing and understanding that HR is constantly dealing with multiple job candidates for multiple departments, reconfirm your contact information and timeline directly with the HR representative.
3. Never stop your job search. Our candidate was fortunate to experience only a limited delay in receiving his offer letter. As a candidate, you do maintain negotiating leverage against a verbal offer in that you will continue your search and interviews until you surface a complete offer (verbal and written). This leverage can assist you in applying negotiating pressure to get the letter completed and ready for your acceptance if it is properly framed. The employer should assume that as a quality candidate you do have options. These options may materialize faster if they do not act in turning their verbal offer into a formal written offer. Thus, they stand the chance of losing your services.
"Offer Letter Limbo" can be a frustrating place. Careful steps at this critical stage of the interview process will assist you in reaching the finish line.
Executive recruiter William Werksman is a frequent columnist to job boards including http://www.NevadaJobBoard.com addressing both the candidate's and employer's perspective. Werksman's expertise has been featured in business magazines, national newspapers and television news segments. His firm, Resource Partners, is recognized as the leading source of specialized and executive talent in the Casino and Gaming industry. He manages a staff of recruiters out of his firm's Las Vegas, Nevada headquarters. He may be reached at: Bill@CareerInsider.com
Wind Chimes and more... You are just about to leave university You are just... Read More "Who is that hot babe in the picture?" isn't the... Read More Are you a career changer? Or, are you satisfied with... Read More To learn a language for career advancement is one of... Read More Recruiting firms, like most businesses today, must embrace technology in... Read More Are you doing what you really want to do or... Read More "Stop being such a Pollyanna," a trusted, more experienced colleague... Read More Peter Humleker had it made. As the general manager of... Read More Yes I know that we usually think of interviews as... Read More Let me ask you a question: are you tired of... Read More One of the most important parts of a job... Read More Just about every month, there's a new research report detailing... Read More Dear Job-Seeker:Just as Goldilocks was suspicious of the big bad... Read More Getting a job is not just about your performance in... Read More The New Year is a great time to analyze your... Read More Determine your ideal career--one that's in alignment with your values,... Read More One of the most common forms of background check performed... Read More Dr. Denis Waitley, trainer of leaders, including Super Bowl and... Read More Many years ago, when I was a young job-searching greenhorn,... Read More Your career, like any journey, has a beginning, an end... Read More Marketing shouldn't be limited to advertising companies. Finding a job... Read More Most of the time, competition stimulates us, gets our juices... Read More Do you think that there is a big sign that... Read More Let me introduce you to Ben. He made it happenBen... Read More Some interview questions are asked so frequently that they've become... Read More
Windchimes
for great gifts!
Making The Best Of Yourself At Interview
Now, Do You Have Any Questions?
Crafting A Stellar Career Summary For Your Resume
Learn a Language for Career Advancement
Resume Posting: Tips for Jobseekers
Discover What You Really Want To Do
A Bit of Pollyanna
Career Change: From Suits & Sales to Boots & Rails
Listening for Interview Success
Job Lead Websites To Use in Your Telecommuting Search
Assess Your Transferable Skills
Dissatisfied With Work? Perhaps Its You
Cover Letter Warning: Watch Out For the BIG BAD WORD!
Job Interviews -- How to Follow Up Effectively
10 Major Signs of Job Dissatisfaction
Career Discovery - Pinpoint Your Ideal Career
Are Your References Ready?
What Everybody Ought To Know About How To Change Their Career or Profession and Still Survive...
5 Simple Rules for A Great Job Interview
Self-Knowledge: The Key To Finding The Right Career Direction
Career Success Through Self-Marketing
Successful Job Search: Knocking Out The Competition
How Can You Find Freelance Writing Jobs?
Writing Resumes That Attract Your Perfect Job
The 7 Tough Job Interview Questions That Can Make or Break You - and How to Answer Them
Goal Setting & ResearchYou can only set informed career goals... Read More
You've heard the real estate cliché: the three factors that... Read More
Purpose: Learn about the new Polygraph for management hiresHis heart... Read More
Sooner or later, the interview invitation is going to say... Read More
Look upon yourself as a company with a product or... Read More
This career article will give you some great tips on... Read More
While identity theft is nothing new, the Web has opened... Read More
You've been through an employer's interview process successfully and have... Read More
My starting point was how to draw on 25 years... Read More
Millions of people everyday spend eight hours or more in... Read More
"What is my calling?" Do any of us really have... Read More
Brian's work was exceptional. Still, as his boss,... Read More
Managing your career, just like managing your life, requires preparation... Read More
If you are concerned that your company might be planning... Read More
You have to ask --- IS a FRANCHISE FOR YOU?There... Read More
You are about to compete for the best people again.... Read More
Has this ever happened to you: You have been working... Read More
Set the stage for fantastic job fair follow-up while you... Read More
When there is an opening to fill, a company has... Read More
There are some tactics you can action whatever you wish... Read More
I have to admit that I'm starting to slow down... Read More
The best cover letters are 'one-page wonders.' Why? Because they... Read More
Tying a tie properly may tie you to your next... Read More
If you decide to get a degree in nursing, there... Read More
To learn a language for career advancement is one of... Read More
Careers, Jobs & Employment |