Entry Level Recruitment Consultant – Immediate start
London / £25000 - £35000
INFO
£25000 - £35000
LOCATION
London
Permanent
Entry Level Recruitment Consultant
South West London
Base Salary: £25k plus commission and bonuses
(First year OTE £35k, Second Year OTE £60k, Third Year onwards OTE £100k+)
The Harnham Group is a fast growing, innovative and market leading recruitment consultancy based in London with offices in Amsterdam, Berlin, Phoenix, San Francisco and New York. We're hiring for our next intakes and looking for people who want to work in sales and become a successful salesperson.
Harnham was born in 2006 by our 3 founders who set out to create a business that is people-centered and focuses on delivering results to clients. Fast forward to now and Harnham is the global leader in Data & Analytics recruitment providing talent solutions to companies across all industries, whilst still being a people-centered company.
Why work in recruitment at Harnham?
- Your earning potential is unlimited, we have no caps or thresholds on our commission structure. Starting with 10% at entry level, progressing to 20% and 30% from Senior Consultant and above.
- You'll receive market leading training; we have an amazing training team to teach you sales skills and support you throughout your career here.
- Loads of incentives; from Michelin star lunches to all-inclusive trips to Ibiza and Tokyo we have a lot to reward you for your hard work and achievements.
- Fast progression - most people who join us achieve their first promotion in their first year in the business
- Working in a competitive, results-driven and ambitious environment. You'll be working alongside some of our highest performing consultants - who will also give you support - as well as working in a fun workplace with a tuck shop and beer fridge.
What will you be doing?
Recruitment is a sales-based role where you'll have targets to hit and KPIs to work towards so you can expect to be:
- Developing new business through chasing up leads
- Pitching and selling to clients
- Sourcing candidates through job adverts, job boards, LinkedIn, referrals and headhunting
- Managing the interview process
- Closing deals and negotiating offers
- Building up your knowledge of the Data & Analytics market and becoming a specialist recruitment consultant
Who are we are looking for?
We used to call our training a graduate scheme, and we of course are still really interested in speaking to graduates however we have recently changed our wording to ensure that people know that we welcome applicants from all backgrounds for the role. Given that we provide full training as to do the role, your drive and energy is more important, so whether you are looking to change career or return to work - we would love to hear from you.
We look for these key skills and qualities:
- Self motivation
- Proactive and positive attitude
- People who go beyond and encourage others around them
- Team players
- A desire to work in a busy sales role
Our Commitment to DEI:
At Harnham, we are deeply committed to fostering Diversity & Inclusion (D&I) within our organization. Over the past three years, we have implemented a comprehensive D&I strategy that guides our growth plans for the future. While we have achieved significant milestones, such as maintaining an equal gender split across all offices and surpassing census data in multiple ethnicities, we recognize that there is always more progress to be made and are actively focusing on this.
How to apply - submit your CV via the APPLY NOW button to send your application to Emma Way @ Harnham

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Our Interview With Amit Jnagal, CEO Of AI Firm Infrrd | Harnham US Recruitment post
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Amit Jnagal is the CEO of Infrrd.ai, an award-winning Artificial Intelligence software firm in San Jose. We reached out to learn what had inspired Amit to start the business and what trends he predicted for the future of the industry. In addition, we asked his take on diversity in business as well as what he looked for in prospective candidates.Here’s what he had to tell us.What inspired Infrrd.ai?It’ll be ten years next month that I started Infrrd. The same age as my son, who inspired it.Well, I’d wanted to start a venture of my own since I graduated and spent the next 12 years working for two large organizations. These experiences led to work with some exceptionally talented people. So, being a forward-thinker, I made a mental list of their names and resolved to have them work for me once my own venture took off. I was cruising with a high-flying career when our first child was born. It was then I realized if I was ever going to start something of my own, the time was now. So, I quit my corporate job when my son was 10 days old and got to work. I’ve been an entrepreneur ever since and was successful in getting most people on my mental list to join me – some agreed in a second, some took a couple of years of convincing, a few took more than five years, and there are a few people that I am still working on.While I’ve had my share of failed ventures, this is my success and it’s taken a decade to get here. How have trends in the industry affected your business and what do you see in the future of say, the next one to five years? In my more than two decades of experience, I have witnessed two revolutions which have fundamentally changed the way the world works. The first was the advent of the internet and the second was smart phones. We are at the beginning of another such revolution in AI. It amazes me still, the things we can do for our clients using AI for automation. The demand means jobs, yet at the same time, there are a few which will cease to exist, which I wrote about earlier this year. My son, now 10-years old wants to be a pilot when he grows up. But I suspect that will be one of the jobs which ceases to exist by the time he enters the workforce. AI is here. And over the next one to five years, it’s important for businesses to know how to redesign their business around it. In order to thrive, they’ll want to be AI enabled.What are your recommendations for building a team within a startup?Where do I start? Well, I have plenty of recommendations of how to NOT to build a team within a startup. But when you’re first scaling your business, there are different phases as you start up. As you grow, you’ll need people with different specializations. During the first few years, you’ll need people who are generalists – folks who are happy to do whatever needs to be done to move the company forward. Sales on Monday, Customer Support Management on Thursday, and throughout the week continuing to build the product. People who thrive on ever-changing responsibilities would do well in the beginning of a startup. In fact, it’s impossible to get off the ground without them. But if they do their job right and you start to grow, a time will come when you will need specialists that can create a system for each part of the organization and scale it. This is when you start hiring separate VP of Sales, VP of Customer Success, VP of Marketing, and fine tune your leadership within your data professionals team; let them build their teams. People who get the startup started and those who scale it have very different skills and styles of working. It is important to get the right people at the right time.What are some things to consider both as a business and a candidate in regard to diversity? Here’s an answer that you might not expect. You need to consider nothing when it comes to diversity; rather you need to ‘un-consider’ stuff that might cloud your judgement. With experience, everyone starts collecting heuristics that prejudice how they look at people. More often than not, this prejudice blocks you from hiring people by ‘considering’ heuristics that are irrelevant. Learn to evaluate people for what they bring to the table rather than their demography. I was surprised when we won the diversity award for 2018. I had never looked at my team using a demography lens to figure out what kind of people to hire. To our mind, as long as you have the right skill and experience to do the work, you’ll get a shot at proving yourself at Infrrd.What are companies like yours looking for in a candidate hire? We go through a ton of profiles before we make an offer to someone. What we look for in a candidate varies by experience. At the entry level, we look for people who have shown some spark and done something that most other people have not – creating new algorithms, getting certified in some technology, presented paper at conferences or technical events, etc. For mid-level hires, our primary concern besides skill is whether this person exhibits our values and if he or she will gel with our team. High performers are great. But make sure they’re a good fit with the rest of your team. Remember when I said I knew how NOT to build a team? We’ve had our fair share of people and teams who just didn’t click and it was detrimental to business. At a senior level, we look for good experience, shared values and an ability to lead people. A good leader can get outstanding results from any team. That is what makes an awesome leadership hire for us.If you’d like to learn more and are interested in working with AI. Check out our current vacancies or contact one of our expert consultants to learn more.For our West Coast Team, call (415) 614 – 4999 or send an email to sanfraninfo@harnham.com. For our Mid-West and East Coast Teams, call (212) 796 – 6070 or send an email to newyorkinfo@harnham.com.

Artificial Intelligence vs. Human Intelligence | Harnham US Recruitment post
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With Linkedin being full of ‘recruitment bashing’ and many backing the extinction of recruiters because of the latest advancements in AI and Machine Learning I thought I’d share why a computer can never replace the human interaction and emotional intelligence that good recruiters can bring to the table.Note the term ‘good recruiters’. Quite important to this article. Recruitment is a highly populated, saturated market whereby anybody with the access to a phone and laptop can ultimately become a recruiter or start a recruitment business. As someone utilizing the services of a recruiter, it is in your bestinterest to be stringent and identify those that fall under the ‘good recruiter’ bracket. Be selective over who you work with and build fewer relationships but with those market experts that know your relevant industry inside out. You will find that both your opinion and customer experience will improve significantly.Numerous companies have been emerging that focus on eliminating the process of the recruiter. Many modelled on a platform basis connecting direct employers with potential employees. Using data science models and machine learning to automate interview processes and create a better ‘match’ between hiring partners and candidates with the view to eradicate human error. Thus, removing the need for a recruiter.Guess what? Recruitment becoming extinct isn’t a new topic. In the 90s job boards were introduced and everybody thought that was going to remove the need for the recruitment industry. Wrong. Recruitment evolved. Then Linkedin becomes a platform with the potential to connect everybody worldwide on a professional basis. Again, the same trumpet blown. Why would you need a recruiter? And again, recruitment survives. It just evolves.A robot cannot develop personal relationships with you, become a friend rather than a recruiter, go for a beer, become a trusted partner that you value, demonstrate emotional intelligence, carry out salary negotiations on your behalf or selectively filter certain information (Yes, I said that), not because it is unethical or trying to scam you but because it is in the best interest for both parties to come to an agreement. Full knowledge isn’t always best. Would you want to know everything that your partner said about you to their friends? Probably not. Furthermore, when hiring most will agree that 50% is based on technical capability and skill set, the remaining 50% on cultural fit, work ethic, attitude etc. A machine cannot assess an individual’s ability to fit in with a team. The humanized touch is something that cannot be replicated or replaced.Features on the left-hand side of that comparison sheet are vital during any job search.A couple of interesting conversations this week. One where a senior level candidate (C-level) believed that an ATS (Applicant Tracking System) had some form of algorithm in place to automatically review a resume and assess suitability for a job. Now, there may be an ATS out there capable of doing this but I have never used one. In the three recruitment companies I have worked with, every consultant has personally reviewed every resume that is submitted in relation to a job. Granted, reviewing each resume only takes around 30 seconds of my time but that’s because I know my market inside out and know exactly what clients are looking for. The second conversation was around robots conducting brain surgery. A robot is now capable of carrying out an operation that takes a surgeon 2 hours in 2.5 minutes which sparked some research on my side. That research led to me finding out that there were 144 deaths during robot-assisted surgery, 1,391 injuries, and 8,061 counts of device malfunctions between 2000- 2013. The question posed here is around human error vs computer malfunction. Sure, that was four years ago and technology has advanced since then but personally I would opt for a brain surgeon carrying out my operation any day.I like to relate things back to dating as it’s always a hot topic in the US. Let’s look at Tinder as an example– an algorithm based app ultimately matching you with your future husband (or hook up). Yet, most people that I ask about dating apps would always say the same thing – “I’d much rather meet a guy (or girl) in a bar.” Why? Because the initial chemistry stimulated from human interaction is far greater than that achieved by an algorithm.Advancement in technology isn’t always a good thing. The modern world for humans is about adaptation and evolution. The recruitment industry will not become extinct but it will evolve into a different model than its current state.You always trust your friends to do best by you. Build friendships with recruiters that know and understand your market and in turn this will develop strong business relationships when the time comes that you need their services.

Data & Analytics Profession Increasingly Becoming ‘Career Of Choice’ For Young Women | Harnham Recruitment post
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Over the decades, the number of women that make up the Data & Analytics industry has slowly but surely grown. Indeed, in 2020, women made up 30 per cent of the industry compared to only 25 per cent in 2019 – a sure sign that steps were being taken in the right direction to reach the desired 50/50 gender parity. This week, we released our annual State of Diversity in Data & Analytics report and, despite the extreme hurdles that the COVID-19 pandemic presented, the picture for gender diversity remains a positive one. Women are entering the industry at record paceThe results show that the number of young women entering the UK’s Data & Analytics sector since the start of the pandemic is three times higher than that of the tech industry as a whole. According to our study, which involved 4,600 respondents, more than 1 in 3 of all new hires made in the 18 months to September 2021 were female compared to just 10 per cent for the entire tech sector. Additionally, we were pleased to see that the gender pay gap at entry-level has fallen to 6 per cent versus the national average of 7.4 per cent.What we can take from these encouraging results is that not only are employers doing more to welcome and retain female talent in the workplace, but further support is happening a lot earlier on – at education level – to ensure women are given equal opportunities and encouraged to take up STEM careers. As mentioned in a recent blog, in order to see more women moving into the STEM sectors, there must be more engagement at a younger age. This helps avoid the STEM cliff, which is usually seen at around eight or nine years of age, whereby young girls become disengaged and usually fall away from learning. This then creates a ripple effect and only a few years later, we see the results: a very male-dominated space. Thankfully, as we can see in our latest report, the tables are turning. It’s not time to pull back on the reinsNevertheless, we need to continue ‘upping the anté’ and resist becoming complacent. While the number of women joining at entry level has risen significantly this year, it’s hard to ignore the fact the number of women that make up the industry at all levels has dropped over the past 12 months. Indeed, the number of women working in the sector at all levels dipped by 2 per cent to 28 per cent of all professionals. At senior management level, the number halves from 40 per cent to 24 per cent while the number of women operating on executive teams has also seen a fall from 24 per cent to 12 per cent. Furthermore, the gender pay gap across the board has widened by 3.5 per cent since March 2020 and stands at 13.5 per cent.What’s next?It is vital that leaders continue to maintain the new, innovative ways of working which have been initiated by the pandemic, such as remote and flexible working, that have proven to offer a wider range of opportunities to a much broader demographic. Companies must also continue to be as open, honest, and transparent as they have been in the past 18 months with their employees, regularly listening to their needs and wants to make the working world as accessible as possible. While the industry has a lot of work ahead to reach the right level of inclusion, it’s important to step back and recognise all that has been done to get to where we stand today. It has taken a long time and immense effort to create change and appreciating this will be the momentum that spurs us to continue this hard work.To read this year’s report, click here.

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