The interim’s ability to tactfully challenge came from experience across many clients and, especially, many sectors.
Client Challenge Example
Example solutions included technologically advanced (for a
‘basics’ industry), end-to-end digital transformation of core processes and
clean data sources for better decision making, having endured paper-based
processes and dirty data for many years.
Imagine, if you will, basically educated road workers using
mobile devices to capture risk assessment evidence (photos), to track job
workflows and to reschedule work priorities; quite a transformation!
The client also turned around from loss-making to profitable
in nine months on the back of this, and other cognitive bias challenges.
Commodity Driven Candidate Selection
The Interim Service Provider (ISP) challenge to clients’
mind-sets via their selected candidates appears to have taken a back seat in
recent years. It has been replaced by narrowly specified candidate sector
experience and CV brokerage introduced from contractor/commodity recruitment
practices.
Interims now tend to meet with clients via ISPs selected for
client sector fit rather than the ability to champion change and transformation
based on broad skillsets and agnostic sector experience.
I think this practice does not well serve UK PLC and the
client-ISP-interim industry.
As one respected interim recruiter put it recently: “'More
of the same' only results in 'more of the same'.”
IR35 Likely Effects
An evaluation of the proposed 2020 IR35 changes is a likely
dramatic impact on the current interim and contractor industries.
There will be a confirmation of independent interims outside
IR35; and contractors becoming ‘part and parcel’ of the client and inside IR35,
effectively employees.
The New (former) Interim Approach
The commodity-based marketing practices which entered the
interim space ten plus years ago will be replaced, if not already, by
consultative approaches to client solutions, above, say, £700 per day interim
rates.
Multiple CVs emailed to clients will become passé, and
‘chats over coffee’ will make a comeback for both ISPs and interims to more
fully explore solutions to critical client problems.
One recently visited IIM Platinum recruiter said he does not
send CVs to clients, preferring to book coffee slots for clients to see three
interims he knows can do the job.
I encourage clients and interims (when in an assignment, as
clients) to take up this approach and ask ISPs to send interims they trust and
know can do the job, rather than wade through copious CVs to select people, to
then see as well.
Why should clients do all the work?
Perhaps this new approach could also serve clients in
contractor selection?
Client Education
Key to a transition away from CV brokerage to chats over coffee
with interims known to be able to do the job is client education.
Interims (per the IIM Surveys) find 60% of their assignments
themselves, and ISPs the remaining 40%.
In my view, both interims and ISPs must educate clients in
new ways of getting the best ideas, talents and capabilities for critical
client change and transformation needs.
All three parties in the interim industry will win by
preferring a consultative interim industry approach over client CV filtering.
ISPs will need to let go, though, of their fear of losing
business by not sending many CVs to clients just in case they might send the
right one.
ISP Branding
Another interim recruitment group I recently met has for
quite some time separately branded their interim and contractor businesses not
to confuse clients, and to focus consultants with the right skills on the right
approach that fits the required client solution (interim or contractor).
Risks to AvoidA risk I see (and two other ISPs recently visited), is the commoditised approach to interim engagement lacks sustainability.
Larger consulting houses (to whom commoditised CV brokering
is anathema to their business models), will gain further market share in
value-adding change and transformation work; and perhaps the interims too.
Another risk is interims forming interim practices with
marketing capabilities to build on their 60% self-sourced engagements.
ISP Recommended Changes
A question for ISPs: how are you discerning, separately
branding, marketing, and appropriately resourcing with skilled consultants
client offerings?For example:
-
Do you make a distinction between interim and commodity approaches in your recruitment processes – are they clearly defined, or confused – to best serve the client base?
- Should your interim and contractor/commodity offerings have separate brands?
- Are your consultants then working with the right approaches and client connections?
It is difficult to challenge client cognitive bias (a major
client benefit) in a CV. However, half-hour chats with clients about their
challenges and discussing, among other things, ways other industries solve
similar problems is where enhanced interim industry value-add will be gained.
All three parties (client-ISP-interim) will then be served
better, and the reputation of the interim industry will grow in response
because of the progression to a consultative approach.Addendum
Of course, consultants do challenge cognitive bias. However, they lack the hands-on and in-depth leadership engagement that interims are renowned, to see what is happening deep inside clients’ businesses.
Article by Simon C Jones, Interim Finance Director/IIM Director