{"id":388,"date":"2022-11-15T16:58:49","date_gmt":"2022-11-15T17:58:49","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/yjoyclub.com\/?p=388"},"modified":"2023-06-08T21:40:48","modified_gmt":"2023-06-08T21:40:48","slug":"4-best-practices-for-contacting-engineering-candidates","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/yjoyclub.com\/index.php\/2022\/11\/15\/4-best-practices-for-contacting-engineering-candidates\/","title":{"rendered":"4 Best Practices for Contacting Engineering Candidates"},"content":{"rendered":"
As a founder, recruiting and onboarding top technical talent to your team is vital. A great software engineer will help scale your product and ensure the growth of your company. But, you probably don\u2019t have a ton of time and energy to build the perfect hiring process<\/a> and interview hundreds of engineering candidates.<\/p>\n Engineers are inundated with requests for new opportunities daily.\u00a0 In fact, some engineers report receiving as many as 30 messages per day via Linkedin alone. As a founder looking to make early hires in your organization, it\u2019s essential to make a first impression<\/a> that will receive a response.<\/p>\n Here are four best practices that you should follow when contacting prospective candidates.<\/p>\n Messages that are received directly from a founder or technical leader receive a higher response rate than those sent from other team members. Candidates recognize when they are contacted by the leader of an organization (especially with a pertinent and well-written message).<\/p>\n Your message should be personal and authentic. It should convey that you are interested in building a relationship with the candidate and that you genuinely want to learn more about them. Use this opportunity to highlight your company\u2019s unique value proposition. Mention how it fits into their career goals, and why they would want to work there.<\/p>\n Everyone wants to believe their product is truly revolutionary. A more effective pitch is explaining the problem your product is solving and the future vision of the product. What they will be working on day-to-day is just as, if not more important than year-over-year growth in headcount.<\/p>\n Candidates care about messages that are directed specifically to them. Take 30 seconds to find something in their profile or resume that connects them to the role you\u2019re looking to fill. For example, relative projects or previous companies, expertise in a tech stack, and research. Reference that in the message.<\/p>\n Avoid generic subject lines<\/a>. While subject lines like \u201cHi!\u201d or \u201cLooking for someone like you\u201d may seem harmless, they can actually decrease your response rate by up to 50%.<\/p>\n If this role has a range or target compensation, share that in the initial message. It\u2019s better to be upfront with candidates<\/a> than deal with mismatched expectations after going through the full interview process.<\/p>\nContacting Prospective Engineering Candidates<\/h2>\n
1. Be Authentic.<\/strong><\/h3>\n
2. Objectivism is important.<\/strong><\/h3>\n
3. Personalize your outreach.<\/strong><\/h3>\n
4. Be transparent about compensation<\/strong><\/h3>\n
<\/h2>\n
Outreach Templates For Engineering Candidates <\/strong><\/h2>\n