Several
years ago I was handling the recruitment assignment for a Johannesburg-based
company. A job advert was in the national Sunday paper. Imagine finding over 47
applications rolling into your email by Monday morning. Suddenly, having a cup
of coffee and asking colleagues about their weekend seemed like a waste of
precious time. I just dived into doing work.
One
of the emails came from Tinyiko. She was working in Limpopo. Her email
highlighted her recent achievements and the impact her work had had on her
current employer. Her motivation letter articulated why she thought she was the
right person for the job. Her CV highlighted the initiatives she has come up
with, including the things she is planning to implement. I set her CV aside and
asked my colleague to arrange a telephone interview. We short-listed her for
the final interview.
There
was a problem. If Tinyiko was to take up the post, she’d have to relocate. We
resolved that we will cross that bridge when we get to it. On the day when we
invited her to attend the final interview in Johannesburg, she raised another
technicality. ‘Fusi, I have informed my manager about this opportunity,’ she
said. ‘He is refusing to let me go; he is increasing my salary,’ she concluded.
I was stunned. My boss had taught me that once you land a great candidate, lure
her with a great tongue. So I went to work inside Tinyiko’s doubtful mind. We
paid for her flight and for her overnight hotel stay.
Arriving
at the interview, Tinyiko was more than prepared. A suit-clad towering lady
with an effortless smile greeted me in the reception. ‘Fusi,’ she said as I was
leading her into the interview room. ‘I have prepared a Corporate Communication
strategy for them.’ Before I could say Wow, Tinyiko suppressed me, ‘I even have
enough copies for them; I’m going to rock them!’ I was beaming.
Tinyiko
"rocked" the interview panel and left for the airport, leaving them
to regain their senses. I was returning from walking her out when the manager
stood from his chair and said, ‘Tinyiko is the one! I wanted to hear something
so relevant and practical,’ he said. Tinyiko accepted the job, but not before
we had revised her salary offer about two times. Her boss was plying her with
the counter-offers. She relocated to Johannesburg. She rocked the new company’s
communications division so well that she was offered a promotion within two
years in the job.