In one role and skill set we have a "multiple of ten's of openings" in St. Louis to fill in a short time frame with one customer. If you have gone through this before, was there any one particular method that you employed which had the greatest impact at capturing a large percentage of the opportunity?
We are willing to subcontract and engage independent recruiters. Compensation and Rates are appropriate for Developers with 5 years experience in Java, EJB, Struts, JSP, Eclipse, XML/XSLT, PL/SQL.
Appreciate any ideas and suggestions you may offer.
-Ken
Tags: developer, independent, java, louis, missouri, recruiter, split, st., subcontract
Permalink Reply by Irina Shamaeva on March 29, 2011 at 5:44pm Hi Ken,
Dice is a good job board for Java developers.
I do sourcing and charge by the hour if that is of interest. I used to be a Java engineer myself years ago.
Thanks,
Irina (profile)
Permalink Reply by Ken Totten on March 30, 2011 at 9:31am
Permalink Reply by Dylan Howell on March 30, 2011 at 2:39pm
Permalink Reply by Ken Totten on March 30, 2011 at 3:02pm
Permalink Reply by C. B. Stalling!! on March 30, 2011 at 5:25pm How many do you need I can have 30 to 40 people to you ASAP through a compant that has people on the bench right now ready to go to work in St Louis in 48 hrs..
Chris@seephotonow.com email me
Permalink Reply by Kimberly Roden on March 30, 2011 at 8:47pm Hi Ken,
I work for a software company and was going to suggest Dice as well. In our case, when we've gotten a candidate from there, their friends follow! Good luck.
Permalink Reply by Jason Monastra on March 30, 2011 at 10:05pm Dice is a solid offering for your need, however depends on the number of people you are looking for. Certain projects require large numbers and that service will not provide a large numbers. However for a few positions it will work well. If you are looking for a large number, it will require a strategic network in the area and there are various ways to generate that quickly. A lot of the recommendations mentioned will work, you will need to do them in conjunction with each other if the number is large.
I do believe that referrals and networks with this type of work is a must have. In addition a solid teaming arrangement with a select number of subcontractors is a must have. Doing larger projects with the government, we have RFQs requiring 35 - 250 people at a time. You can search Dice all day and never find what you neeed. Teaming arrangements with partners (good ones) provide the ultimate infrastructure for success when you need large quantities of people.
Permalink Reply by Ken Totten on March 31, 2011 at 3:39pm I appreciate everyone's response. I agree with all of you. To consistently achieve high candidate coverage you have to employ a multi-faceted approach towards recruiting. Also, recruiting doesn't start with receiving a job order. It's knowing what kinds of people your clients need on a recurring basis and "always be recruiting". Sourcing, Referrals, participating in SIG and professional associations, job boards, social media, web forums such as linkedin, and especially strategic relationships with independent recruiters and staffing firms are all important and necessary. I would like to develop new connections with independent recruiters and staffing firms who are capable of assisting us with recurring IT contract labor needs in St. Louis, Bloomington, MN and Orlando, FL. Thank you and Best regards. -Ken
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