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Generalizing like this is pretty tough. While it's certainly true that you have to have the respect of the candidate, some of these ideas are not true in anything like all cases.
If you're recruiting people who don't have jobs, you're working a very low end of the business. Things might be different when recruiting means screening through a series of unemployed candidates. I'm sure that managing a temp firm or a contract agency desk has some aspects of dealing from a position of superiority based on who is already employed.
And, I suppose that it's true that you have the golden apple and I don't if I really want the job you're recruiting for.
But, to suggest that the way to treat candidates is as if they were unemployed and that you are there own personal saviour is silly.
It's possible to get away with this sort of arrogance in markets where there is a labor surplus. It's extremely counter-productive if you are trying to woo major strategic talent (or people who are in real deman) from one company to another.
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