Recruitment Fees
Revision as of 23:05, 8 May 2020 by Gary (talk | contribs) (Gary moved page What Recruiters Do to Recruitment Fees without leaving a redirect)
Recruitment Fees (hereinafter, the Lectio) is the second lesson part of the Recruiters' Essentials lesson that introduces its participants to employment and related topics.
This lesson belongs to the Introduction to Recruitment session of the CNM Cyber Orientation. The Orientation is the second stage of the WorldOpp Pipeline.
Contents
Content
The predecessor lectio is Third-Party Recruiters.
Key terms
- Recruitment fee. The fee that an employer agrees to pay as compensation for sourcing, screening, and, sometimes, selecting one or more employment candidates.
- Placement fee. The fee that an employer agrees to pay a contingency recruiter as compensation for placing one or more employment candidates into specified employment. In the United States, those fees are typically collected as a percentage of the annual salary of the hired, ranging between 20% to 33%.
- Referral fee (finder's fee). A commission paid to an intermediary or the facilitator of a business transaction. This fee is rewarded because the intermediary discovered the deal and brought it forth to interested parties. Depending on the circumstance, this fee can be paid by either the transaction's buyer or seller. In the United States, either an employer or a recruiter may pay the fee for finding the right employment candidate. For instance, an employer may pay the fee to its current employee instead of paying the placement fee to a contingency recruiter. Or a contingency recruiter may pay the fee from its placement fee, etc.
- ERP human resources. Any system for human resource management that is integrated into a larger enterprise management system. Usually, both systems are built on enterprise resource planning software.
Script
- Recruitment fee. The fee that an employer agrees to pay as compensation for sourcing, screening, and, sometimes, selecting one or more employment candidates.
- Placement fee. The fee that an employer agrees to pay a contingency recruiter as compensation for placing one or more employment candidates into specified employment. In the United States, those fees are typically collected as a percentage of the annual salary of the hired, ranging between 20% to 33%.
- Referral fee (finder's fee). A commission paid to an intermediary or the facilitator of a business transaction. This fee is rewarded because the intermediary discovered the deal and brought it forth to interested parties. Depending on the circumstance, this fee can be paid by either the transaction's buyer or seller. In the United States, either an employer or a recruiter may pay the fee for finding the right employment candidate. For instance, an employer may pay the fee to its current employee instead of paying the placement fee to a contingency recruiter. Or a contingency recruiter may pay the fee from its placement fee, etc.
- Software applications are often power ERP human resources. Any system for human resource management that is integrated into a larger enterprise management system. Usually, both systems are built on enterprise resource planning software.
- Pipeline candidacy for sale
What Career Is is the successor lectio.