Archives October 2008

Vice President and General Manager (hl022sz)

TOXICOLOGY SERVICES – VICE PRESIDENT AND GENERAL MANAGER – SUZHOU CHINA

A NYSE listed public company welcomes overseas Senior Managers to join it. This position is located in Suzhou, China. They offer a highly competitive compensation and full benefits package along with an exciting world-class work environment.

Job Description:
1 Responsible for all aspects of the overall conduct and performance of the facility including the operational and financial performance of the site.
2 Providing leadership and oversight for daily operations, including analyzing financial and technical information to help reduce costs and increase revenues.
3 Developing and implement policies and procedures and processes within operating units
4 Working closely with various departments to ensure organizational standards are being met and operational processes are efficient and in compliance with established standards and regulations.
5 Ensure that all studies projects are carried out in strict regulatory compliance and adherence to company internal standards.
6 Developing strong business relationships and identify new business opportunities as well as partnering with various governments, universities and research institutes.

Qualifications:
1 Demonstrated successful leadership and management skills.
2 Excellent interpersonal, presentation and project management skills as well experience in the pharmaceutical industry involving customer communications.
3 An understanding of the business side of facility management and the documentation requirements for a GLP laboratory including knowledge of GLP and other relevant FDA and ISO guidelines and regulations.
4 Process working knowledge of international requirements of permits, logistics, and legal requirement of non-clinical testing.
5 Ability to travel in US/EU in order to support business development
6 Verbal and written fluency in Mandarin Chinese and English preferred.
7 An Advanced degree with extensive experience in the management of an Animal Facility and testing experience in Toxicology, Immunology, Biochemistry or Virology or related scientific/engineering field plus 10 years of management experience in preclinical studies.
8 A Ph.D./DVM in Toxicology, Immunology, Biochemistry or Virology or related scientific/engineering field is preferred.

* Please send us your complete resume (both in Chinese and in English to: ‘topjob_hl022sz@dacare.com'(Please replace “#” with “@”)
* In the email subject MUST you plus the position name ?in either En or Ch ?

Vice President of Medicinal Chemistry (hl021sh)

Job Title:Vice President of Medicinal Chemistry
Location:Shanghai

A NYSE listed public company welcomes overseas Senior Managers to join iit.This position is located in Shanghai, China. They offer a highly competitive compensation and full benefits package along with an exciting world-class work environment.

Job Description:
1 To show strong leadership in building most reputable CRO company in Medicinal Chemistry Services.

2 To lead a group of Directors or Sr. Directors to provide world class medicinal chemistry support on Lead Generation and Lead Optimization programs for our clients.

3 To be responsible for budget management and client relationship development and future business expansion in Medicinal Chemistry Services.

4 To be responsible for manuscripts, patent applications, and posters preparation for public disclosure.

Qualifications:
1 An accomplished and innovative individual with a Ph.D. degree in Organic or Medicinal Chemistry along with at least twelve years of working experience (after obtaining Ph. D. degree or completing postdoctoral research from prestigious university or institution) and at least 10 years of experience in project management and at least 8 years of experience in leading medicinal chemistry programs.

2 Expertise in GPCR and/or kinase target classes is required. An outstanding publication record (> 50) and great accomplishments in discoveries of novel drug candidates are desired.

3 Great problem solving ability is a must-have quality.

* Please send us your complete resume (both in Chinese and in English to: ‘topjob_hl021sh@dacare.com'(Please replace “#” with “@”)
* In the email subject MUST you plus the position name ?in either En or Ch ?

The Secrets of Hiring Great Sales People Finally Revealed

Over the years, I’ve been involved in developing hiring tools for sales representatives in a variety of industries including high technology, financial services, industrial products, consumer products, auto sales, woman’s cosmetics, business services, medical products, pharmaceuticals, and healthcare.

Surprisingly, most sales managers make the same bad decisions, regardless of the product or industry.

Here’s the list of where most sales managers go wrong. Start eliminating these error-producing behaviors and just about all of your sales hiring mistakes will go away.

They think their job is unique. They’re not. There is a common sales process behind each one, that when understood can be used to benchmark any candidate’s past performance against.
They overvalue first impressions. First impressions don’t predict performance. People with great first impressions are frequently incompetent and people with marginal first impression often have a track record of great success. It’s best to measure first impression at the end of the interview and then determine how the candidate’s first impression affected their performance in consistently achieving quota. From what I’ve seen, the best sales managers don’t worry about first impressions, they worry about the candidate having a track record of achieving good sales results selling similar products, to similar buyers, in similar situations.
They overvalue their gut or instinct. This is only acceptable when the sales manager has a track record of hiring all top performers who all make quota in combination with very low department turnover. Emotions, intuition, or instinct are poor predictors of on-the-job success. A track record of past performance selling similar products or influencing similar buyers is a great predictor.
They don’t know the job. Sales is a process that starts with lead generation and ends at closing. Certain aspects of the process are more critical than others. If a sales manager doesn’t know what these are, it’s unlikely that he’ll be able to accurately assess them in the candidate. As a result, the sales manager shifts the decision criteria to first impressions and gut instinct.
They assume they’re great managers. Most great sales people aren’t great managers, yet this is the person most likely to get promoted. It takes a great deal of work to build, develop, and manage an effective sales team. As part of the assessment process, the sales manager has to assess the fit between her style of management and how each person on the team needs to be managed. This directly relates to Hershey and Blanchard’s situational leadership model.

Flipping this over, here are some things you need to do to achieve better results hiring sales reps:

1. Know the sales process from beginning to end before ever interviewing another candidate.

Whether the sales cycle is 30 minutes long or months, there are some typical steps that ultimately determine how successful the sales rep will be. Breaking your company’s sales process into these steps enables the sales manager to identify the critical drivers and then assess the candidate’s past performance against these. At a broad level most sales processes can be categorized into these big segments:

Prospecting and lead generation
Qualifying the lead and conducting needs analysis
Proving your product’s worth in comparison to the customer’s needs
Preparing some type of offer or proposal
Closing and negotiating the offer
Of course, there are multiple variations to this depending on customer need, the complexity of the offering, the type of buyer involved and how the buying decision is made, the dollars involved, budgets available, economic conditions and competitive positioning, to name just a few.

A performance profile summarizes these details in the form of a series of prioritized performance objectives including specific results and time frames. For example, a performance objective for a sales rep developing a new territory might have an objective like, “within 30 days prepare a detailed territory plan including target clients to meet.” A similar performance objective for a outbound telesales person might be, “within 30 days after completing the training convert 35% of all sales calls into minimum $100 orders.”

Once these performance objectives have been determined put them into priority order. The top two or three (out of 6-8) tend to become the critical success drivers. For example, conducting needs analysis with a decision-maker might be relatively easy, with the real key to success being the ability to get past a gate-keeper and arrange the meeting with the decision-maker. It is essential that the members of the hiring team understand these critical success drivers and then hone in on them during the interview. (Here’s more information on how to prepare performance profiles and interview for a wide variety of sales positions.) From what I’ve seen lack of understanding of real job needs is the primary cause of bad hiring decisions, not only in sales, but for all jobs.

2. Benchmark the candidate’s performance against the performance profile by asking about these issues:

Get specific details about how the person managed the process and how well they did.
Find out their track record of making quota and how they recovered when things went sour.
Walk through the sales process at a few major successful accounts and compare this to yours.
Walk through the sales process where the person was unsuccessful and compare this to yours.
Find out how the person learned the product line and compare this to yours from a complexity standpoint and the amount of training provided.
Go step-by-step through all of the team issues including managing and processing leads, orders, and pre- and post-delivery issues.
Compare your typical buyer to the types of buyers the candidate successfully handled.
Find out how successful the candidate was working for different sales managers, ask about their styles, then compare these to the hiring sales manager’s style.
3. Benchmark the candidate’s past performance to the performance profile, especially against the critical success drivers.

We use our 10-Factor Candidate Assessment template as a guide to evaluate the candidate against ten factors we’ve seen to be strong predictors of on-the-job success.

For sales, the primary keys to an accurate assessment include a comparison of the sales process, the types of buyers involved, the sales cycle, the complexity of the product and associated terms, and the degree of competition. Of course, the behavioral issues can’t be ignored including persistence, learning the product line, organizational skills, and team leadership, among others, but these are secondary to having a track record of sales success in a comparable situation.

4. Assess managerial fit.

This is probably the most important, yet it is almost always overlooked. A sales manager must be dedicated to training and developing his or her sales team. This requires significant direction, on-the-job training, constant follow-up, the ability to motivate others, and involved planning.

In situational leadership terms these are the classic Director and Coaching styles. A self-managing Delegating style rarely works in sales, especially for a new hire. A Participating style involving territory planning and target account tactics would be appropriate for an experienced sales person who can achieve his goals with limited direction and support.

From what I’ve seen too many sales managers aren’t as involved as necessary to keep their teams on track. If a sales manager isn’t willing to devote 100% of her time to developing and managing her team, even it’s comprised of good people, it will underperform. That’s why choosing the sales manager is the first step in getting the sales hiring process right.

As part of the sales hiring process, we also recommend the use of some type of cognitive and behavioral questionnaire for all finalists. While there are many of these tests around, we’ve been using Profiles International’s for over 20 years with great success.

Knowing that some type of formal test is being used keeps the interviewers more focused, increasing overall assessment accuracy.

Hiring sales people is relatively easy if you don’t get emotionally involved. This alone will eliminate many common hiring mistakes. Regardless of your underlying sales process, the process of hiring great sales people is exactly the same whether you’re selling ERP software or part-time vacation villas. That’s the real secret to hiring great reps.

Leader of Mechanical Design Group (mn195nj)

Job Title: Leader of Mechanical Design Group (Nanjing)
Job Description:
Company introduction: The client is a European company, which has become the world leader in automotive and machine tool markets during past 50 years, by offering its customers a combination of advanced products, market knowledge, and commitment to long term global partnerships. Building on these foundations, it has created an international organization able to deliver application, design, and service support virtually anywhere in the world. Its growth has been characterized by a strong commitment to research and development and close cooperation with customers in the automotive, machine tool, appliance, compressor, bearing, electric motors, aerospace, computer, and other industries. For the quick development in China, they are now looking for the talents to join them.

Report To: GM
Location: Nanjing

Responsibilities:
1. To assist and cooperate in designing complex industrial automated applications.
2. To assist in localizing original applications from headquarters.
3. Design coordination and commissioning & operation support.
4. Mechanical engineering, manufacture and installation technical support.
5. Mechanical design (application layout, mechanical proposal diagram and detail drawings, pneumatic & hydraulic control system, etc.)
6. Long term Strategies:
7. To fully coordinate a large group of experienced mechanical designers.
8. To coordinate internal with engineering and production process.
9. Good organizing the mechanical design jobs for big project.
10. Deal external with customers and sub-suppliers.
11. Sales and bidding support.
12. To coordinate the technical exchanges between the local company and the headquarters abroad.
13. Any other assignments as assigned by Director.

Qualifications:
1. Degree/background – Bachelor Degree in Mechanical/Automation, Engineering, Automatic Handling Devices or related.
2. Experience – At least 10/15 years in auto-industrial automation line or special machine applications design and/or engineering manager
3. Language – Chinese. Good English in oral, reading and writing.
4. Strong knowledge and interest in mechanical design job. Priority-Knowledge of dimensional measuring principle or special machine.
5. High AutoCAD and Solid work/ ProE skills.
6. Good at mechanical solutions.
7. Flexibility, creativity, aggressive attitude to work in team, good communications skills and organization ability.
8. Availability to stay several months abroad for design coordination.
9. Strong interest in growing up with the company.
10. Ability to carry out several tasks at the same time. Plus -Able to always meet deadlines of different tasks and provide quality design
11. Willing to work independently and under pressure
12. Highly responsible and careful.
* Please send us your complete resume (both in Chinese and in English to: ‘topjob_mn195nj@dacare.com'(Please replace “#” with “@”)
* In the email subject MUST you plus the position name ?in either En or Ch ?

Monster snaps up ChinaHR

US-based online recruitment service provider Monster yesterday secured complete control of ChinaHR.com, paying $174 million for the remaining 55 percent stake in the Chinese recruitment site.

Monster had said in its financial report for the second quarter of 2008 that it would pay $200 million to $225 million in cash to ChinaHR.com shareholders.

Monster said in 2005 that it would take the remainder if ChinaHR.com was unable to get listed within three years.

Analysts said the failure of the IPO was due to problems with ChinaHR.com’s profitability. The company suffered a loss of 150 million yuan in 2007, according to Monster’s financial statements for the year.

“The acquisition will give Monster a stronger presence in the Chinese online recruitment market,” said Edward Lo, executive vice-president of Monster China, who takes over as the interim CEO of ChinaHR.com while maintaining his current Monster post.

China’s online recruitment market is led by NASDAQ-listed 51Job with a 29 percent share, followed by ChinaHR.com with 24 percent, according to Beijing-based consulting firm Analysys International.

Although Monster’s acquisition comes amid a slump in US online labor demand due to the global financial crisis, Lo said it is an opportune time for Monster to invest in the Chinese market.

“The economic situation which has ups and downs is a cycle,” he said. “The merger is not a short-term investment but a long-term strategic partnership to create the best global recruitment platform.”

Liu Tong, an online industry analyst from Analysys International, said it is a good deal for Monster from a long-term perspective as China’s online recruitment market is growing rapidly. It grew 36 percent year-on-year in the first quarter of 2008.

In addition, ChinaHR.com’s loss does not mean it has operational problems, he said. In 2007, it achieved a revenue of 281 million yuan.

The merger with Monster means there will be enough cash flow to enhance its brands, he added.

More than 90 percent of ChinaHR.com’s revenue comes from the online recruitment compared to 33 percent of its rival 51job’s, Liu said, adding it means there is plenty of space for Monster to diversify ChinaHR.com’s future revenue structure.

Workers’ rights get new boost

Workers in Guangdong province, under a new regulation, will now have the right to claim compensation for work-related injures or sickness within two years of ceasing employment.

Zhang Xiang, a publicity official of the provincial labor and security department, said yesterday the introduction of the new regulation “is partly due an illness suffered by a woman worker in Shunde district, Foshan city”.

The worker, Ye Biqiong, was employed by a packaging factory in Foshan in 1993.

Ye’s employer purchased insurance against injury for her in 2000.

Ye quit her job in 2006 because of illness.

In 2007, Ye was diagnosed with serious benzene poisoning, which had been certified as being caused by her work at the factory.

Ye and her former employer tried to claim work injury compensation from the social insurance fund bureau of Shunde, but they were turned down.

??The reason being Ye had left the factory before she was diagnosed with the disease.

In May this year, Ye and her former employer brought the bureau to court.

The case drew wide media attention, and the provincial government began to realize that many other people in Guangdong province were in a similar position to Ye, Zhang said.

The director of the Guangdong prevention and treatment center for occupational diseases, Huang Hanlin, the attorney of Ye, Huang Shumei, and a law professor of Sun Yat-sen University, Huang Qiaoyan, also jointly sent a petition letter to the provincial government suggesting that it require the labor and social security department improve its injury compensation regulation.

Under the new regulation a worker who has been diagnosed as having contracted an occupational disease can claim insurance compensation from the labor and social security department even though no longer employed.

The only precondition is that the claim must be made within two years.

The provincial labor and social security department said it released an official announcement on Saturday, and the new regulation would take effect from that day.

“The Shunde branch of the Foshan social insurance fund bureau has accepted Ye’s case and we have withdrawn our lawsuit,” attorney Huang Shumei said.

Human Resources Director (hr116sh)

Job Title: Human Resources Director
Report To: CEO
Location: Shanghai
Our client is a leading technology company serving the hospitality distribution industries and has four branches in China. They dedicated to creating a hotel global distribution network on the Internet, the next generation of online hotel distribution infrastructure.

Their target is to help hotels capture more reservations through more channels ranging from international online travel agencies to domestic travel agencies and other distribution channels, to help those channels gain access to more hotels at lower cost.

Until now, our client has developed and operated its core technology, joined the Open Travel Alliance as only member from China. With the development in China, they are looking for talents to join them.

Job Description:
The role is play a general HR role to ensure the implementation of HR strategies and initiatives cross the organization in the market and to meet the needs of company business development and objectives in China;
Responsibilities:
1. Will lead the HR teams in SH, BJ, GZ and CD; Leader HR Processes such as organizational development and effectiveness, performance management, staffing, training initiatives, compensation, benefits, career development, employee relations and HR policy development;
2. Play a role as a coach or consultant for Line managers in people management, such as recruiting, selection, performance management, and organization development, etc;
3. Generate and implement Staffing policy/procedures to support the operations in the region to ensure hiring the right people at the right position at the right time to meet the business requirements;
4. Take lead in managing regional recruiting activities and provide recruiting services to all functions through working with business leaders and regional HR team. Be a leader in building a pool of prospective candidates;
5. Work with line manager and Participate in the planning process for the high potential employees’ development programs, or assignments;
6. Manage manpower tracking system, such as monthly headcount report, and turnover analysis for the region;
7. Drive the quarterly performance calibration process and mid year and annual salary planning process to ensure a performance culture developed locally;
8. Provide guidance and counseling on HR issues when requested or when needed to improve a department’s performance or relationships;
9. Implement strategic HR initiatives to create a strong culture of leaders and high-performing teams;
10. Take lead in reinforcing company culture through proactive communication programs and organize social activities, and driving the employee engagement level.
Requirement:
1. University degree or above;
2. Around 8-10 years broad-based HR Experience, at least 3 year’s managerial position experience;
3. Be familiar with labour laws and related rule and regulations;
4. Required skills: Very good presentation; Very good planning and organization skills; Energetic and enthusiastic; Self motivated; Honest and reliable;
5. Ability to work well with all levels and types of people;
6. Ability managing ambiguity;
7. Strong learning capability and adaptability;
8. Very good PC skills in MS Words, Excel, Power Point.
* Please send us your complete resume (both in Chinese and in English to: ‘topjob_hr116sh@dacare.com'(Please replace “#” with “@”)
* In the email subject MUST you plus the position name ?in either En or Ch ?

The Web 2.0 Job Seeker: Faster, Smarter, and More Connected

This year in the recruiting industry there has been a lot of talk about how companies are tapping into Web 2.0 technologies to enhance their recruiting. But how is the candidate community also using these technologies for their own purposes, and what impact is it having on our recruiting strategies?

Web 2.0 Candidates Are:
Faster. Candidates can gain access to more available jobs within minutes on any day.
Smarter. Access to salary, compensation, and corporate performance data is everywhere.
More Connected. Social networks help candidates identify insiders at any employer before or after they apply for any position.
Web 2.0 Candidates Are Faster
When job boards came on the scene 10 years ago, they made accessing available job information much easier for candidates. No more digging through the classified section of the Sunday newspaper, crafting up witty cover letters on fluorescent letterhead to get attention and postal mailing resumes. Remember when we’d put our fax numbers on our ads? Come on: how many candidates really had fax machines in their houses? Today, there are “job aggregators” such as indeed.com and simplyhired.com which put all the jobs from multiple job boards into a single search engine that stream directly into any candidate’s personal home page on Google via RSS feeds every day.

I think one of the main reasons that recruiters are after “passive candidates” is that we think we have more time to get them through the interview process, versus “active candidates” who machine-gun apply from job boards to a dozen jobs on any Monday. With the latter, we have to get them setup with an interview within 24 hours and make a hiring decision within two to four days. That’s how fast the market is moving with so much job data available online.

Web 2.0 Candidates Are Smarter
In addition to having access to an ocean of jobs, most candidates tap into salary and compensation data via sites such as payscale.com and/or salary.com. Not to mention that the younger generation of workers aren’t shy about sharing their comp levels in the lunchroom or over beers, unlike our parents’ generation who considered salary discussions to be so taboo they would only share this information with the IRS when filing their annual tax returns.

Many recruiters have candidates show up with a salary report printed from one of these salary sites and demand that their pay be at or above the level on the report. Candidates don’t care if our job descriptions aren’t perfectly matching the ones on those websites; they just see the numbers and get an expectation that’s usually out of line with our compensation levels. Regardless of how you handle this situation in your interview process, employers are under pressure to know how their pay grades compare to other major employers in their markets.

Web 2.0 Candidates Are More Connected
Remember when you would get an applicant resume, see which companies a candidate previously worked for, and then quickly find which of your internal employees had worked with the applicant in the past, in order to get “inside information” to determine if they were a good or bad prospect? (Never mind that 51% of people will comment positively or negatively on someone because of how they liked their personality — and not their actual work performance.)

During the interview process, candidates were lucky to run into a former colleague in the hallways. Or if they get lucky in the interview, they will discover who they might know in common with the interviewing managers and try to discover which “moles” they could find within the prospective company, which would help them do their own due diligence on the employer — not to mention that they will try and gain advocates to help them get the job should their interest grow.

Well, because of the growth of social networks (Facebook, MySpace, LinkedIn, Jigsaw, and many more), the minute most candidates apply for any job (and sometimes even before they apply for a job), they can now instantly see who they know at any prospective employer, all the way back to their old high school or college buddies.

This tilts the access of information toward the candidate community — who can now see if there are bad previous bosses or old enemies working within your company, which they may wish to avoid. The candidates’ reasoning will be if your company hires personalities the candidate disliked, it indicates that your culture prefers those types of individuals, which will have an impact on your employer brand whether you get a chance to enter the conversation or not.

This puts a new pressure on employers to create a working culture that will attract these more web savvy candidates. These Web 2.0 candidates don’t believe most of our career sites’ language about having an exciting work environment. They want to find out for themselves (via networking) what it’s really like to work within the sub-cultures within our company, which are driven by management personalities and business cycles which are exciting to certain candidate types, and a turnoff to others.

Make Better Offers

After a lengthy screening process, the hiring committee feels it has found the right candidate for the company. Now comes the tricky part: how do you design an offer and go through the offer stage of the process without damaging the relationship with the candidate?

Many companies are not prepared to go through the offer step of the process. As a result, they damage the relationship with the candidate. This leads to one of two unfortunate conclusions. Either they lose the candidate or the candidate comes on board, but with scar tissue. Applying some of the best practices from the sales world into a sales talent screening program helps to avoid that scenario.

The offer stage of the hiring process parallels the proposal phase of sales. Best practices in sales say that you don’t present a proposal until a thorough needs analysis has been completed. If a sales person is presenting a proposal to a prospect, he has acquired the information needed to design a solution, has discussed budget, has a full understanding of their solution requirements, and has set an expectation on pricing. This is certainly the case if the salesperson is going to be successful in winning the account.

Looking at this process in relation to the offer stage of the sales talent screening program, many of the same best practices from sales hold true. During the screening program, information needs to be gathered from the candidate to determine their financial requirements. Unfortunately, many sales talent screening programs focus exclusively on screening the candidate for fit, but do not consider the needs for the offer phase of the process. This leads to a last-minute scurry to mine the information from the candidate, or they design the offer blindly. Neither of those are best practices for the offer stage.

In sales, it is said that if you are going to lose, lose early. This prevents you from making a huge investment in a relationship that will not generate revenue. The parallel to screening sales talent is understanding the financial requirements of the candidate early enough to stop the process before over-investing in the relationship. There is no point in continuing a process with a candidate who requires a compensation level 25% above what you can offer. This probably seems logical, but hiring executives rarely focus on this as a de-selection element early in the process.

Just like discussing pricing with a prospect, the financial-needs discussion requires finesse. The candidate knows that you are asking questions about their financials, just like a prospect knows a sales person is fishing for budget information. The better-skilled salespeople tell their prospects, “I don’t want to waste your time by getting you excited about a solution that will not fit in your budget constraints…”

In much the same way, this discussion can be had with the candidate, “I don’t want to excite you about an opportunity that might not be a match for your financial needs. As you look at making a change in position, what thoughts have you given to your compensation requirements?”

With continued finesse, you can dig further into the mix of salary versus commission. Some candidates may rebuff this discussion as they feel the information will be used against them. In some instances, they are justified for having that concern. Hopefully, that is not the case in your company. We’ll come back to this point later. The bottom line is that the two goals of this phase are to gather information that allow you to formulate an offer and to de-select those candidates whose requirements exceed your financial package.

In sales, the proposal phase should not be like a magic show. The prospect should not be shocked by what is included in the proposal. In essence, the proposal is the documentation of what has already been discussed. No surprises. The same holds true for candidates. The time to review the compensation plan details is not after they are hired, or even at the offer stage. The compensation plan should be reviewed at the point where you have a genuine interest in pursuing the candidate and they have a complete enough understanding of the company that they will be able to comprehend the compensation plan.

One of the core requirements associated with any process is that it is measurable. The offer phase of the sales talent screening program should be measured statistically to determine effectiveness. The key statistic is number of offers made versus ones that are accepted. If the acceptance level is less than 80%, the process should be reviewed by asking the following questions.

At what point of the process are the candidate’s financial requirements reviewed?
When it is known that the candidate’s financial requirements exceed the package, is the candidate removed from the process?
At what step is the compensation plan reviewed with the candidate?
In what level of detail is the compensation plan reviewed with the candidate?
How often is the initial offer to the candidate rejected, and subsequently, negotiated successfully?
The last question in the list above ties back to my opening position about damaging the relationship. Again, this ties back to lessons that can be learned from sales. Many years ago, a procurement training specialist shared a pearl about the counsel he gives to salespeople who ask about pricing strategy. He said, “Provide us with the best pricing that you feel comfortable providing and either way you are happy.” This always puzzled salespeople so he explained further. “If you provide your best pricing and are selected, you are happy because you won the account. If you are not selected because we found lower pricing elsewhere, you are happy because you would not have been happy at that price point. Again, either way you are happy.”

Consider this when making an offer to the sales candidate. Develop an offer based on what was learned from the candidate that represents the best offer you are willing to make. Early in the process, tell the candidate that you don’t negotiate offers, but rather put your best offer on the table upfront. It demonstrates a professional message to the candidate and reduces their fear of attempts to lowball them. When companies negotiate offers, while they may “win” the candidate, they damage the relationship. This person is onboarded with the worst scar tissue of all, a lack of trust. The salesperson will always be on the lookout for the company to try to cheat them.

As with any component of the sales talent screening process, preparation is the key to success. Organize your team and design a process that achieves your desired results. This will allow you to create longlasting, fruitful sales marriages.

Spirit of wanting to be own boss strong

CHINESE people are perceived as more likely to be their own boss running a business and this spirit of entrepreneurship is what franchise owners at an exhibition are hoping to tap into.

“Chinese are more enterprising than other people. We have the feeling they are more likely to do their own business rather than work for others,” Anton Widjaja, vice president of PT Top Food Indonesia, the operator of the country’s biggest fast-food chain 77 Esteler Juara Indonesia.

The company, which has 180 stores in Singapore, Australia and Indonesia, is looking for a master franchisee to tap the Chinese market. It aims to open the first store in Shanghai by the end of the year and open at least 10 stores within 2 years in cities like Guangzhou and Shenzhen.

The two-day 2008 Shanghai International Franchise Exhibition, which opened yesterday at the Shanghai International Exhibition Center, has lured 100 franchise owners and huge crowds. Among the exhibition participants were names in the dining industry such as Dio Coffee and Dicos fried chicken.

Franchising has seen an encouraging growth in China as it provides an easy way to do business and help brand owners to rapidly grow business in a market they may not be familiar with.

Last year, the sector in China’s mainland jumped 16 percent, with more than 2,600 franchisers operating in the country and over 200,000 franchised outlets, the Ministry of Commerce said.