×

Business owners recruit nonstop — even in the drive-thru line

In this Sunday, Aug. 4, 2019 photo Deborah Sweeney, CEO of MyCorporations.com, stands for a photograph in Boston with the Boston skyline visible behind. Small business owners looking for new staffers in a tight job market have to get creative to compete with big companies that can offer larger salaries and better benefits. "You can meet someone once and just say goodbye, or you see a pattern of great behavior," Sweeney says. "I believe it's not the skill set you have per se but the attitude you have." (AP Photo/Steven Senne)

By JOYCE M.

ROSENBERG

AP Business Writer

NEW YORK — As Deborah Sweeney placed her order in the drive-thru of a Starbucks near her home, she was impressed by the barista’s attitude and attention to detail. At Sweeney’s next visit, the staffer remembered her name.

Sweeney, CEO of MyCorporation.com, was so amazed that she hired the young woman, first as a receptionist and then in customer service for the Calabasas, California-based online business consultancy.

“She ended up being a rock star,” says Sweeney, who sensed that the barista “could manage an environment where there’s a lot coming at you and be able to stay responsive and keep a good attitude.”

Small business owners looking for new staffers in a tight job market have to be creative to compete with big companies that can offer higher salaries and better benefits. Some owners are giving up on online job boards and recruiters and relying on happenstance and good instincts to find good candidates. They’re doing more networking, and some of it, like Sweeney’s strategy, is off the beaten track and serendipitous. With a national unemployment rate of 3.7%, qualified candidates are hard to come by.

Sweeney has hired two other baristas for her company, and her operations manager found several other staffers during visits to yogurt stores.

“You can meet someone once and just say goodbye — or you see a pattern of great behavior,” Sweeney says.

Rachel Charlupski looks for candidates for her babysitting service “everywhere.” And she found one during the holidays last December, at a car rental counter. She was impressed with the employee who dealt with an irate, ranting customer with calm and poise.

“She was so extremely professional that I said to her once he left, ‘I need you to work for me. The phone calls we get aren’t half as bad as that was, but if you can handle someone at that level, you can work for us,'” recalls Charlupski, owner of The Babysitting Co.

With 3,000 babysitters in major cities as well as an administrative staff, Charlupski is always recruiting. Although a job candidate’s having experience with children is important, “equally important is good and positive demeanor, professional under pressure, energetic and helpful,” says Charlupski, who’s based in Miami. Clients who need help with their children are understandably emotional and under stress at times, and she watches staffers in restaurants and stores to see if they might be a good fit for her business.

Sometimes owners find hires through interactions with other business people, even customers. Carol Galle won’t actively recruit employees of the companies that are her clients, but if she’s approached by a staffer, she’s willing to say yes. Galle owns Special D Events and The Anniversary Co., two corporate event planning businesses in the Detroit area that work on long-term projects, giving her ongoing contact with clients’ staffers.

“The clients we work with get to know our staff, learn how we work and typically like what they see. By the end of the project, we know each other quite well and usually keep in touch,” Galle says. Six of her employees joined her companies after being clients.

Although Avi Sinai finds cold calls from salespeople annoying, he listens to their pitches — and sometimes finds a staffer.

“Sometimes, the person on the other line is good on the phone, persistent without being rude — just like the salesperson I am looking for,” says Sinai, owner of HM Capital, a real estate lender based in Los Angeles. And, if they follow up with another call or an email, which is good practice for people in sales, Sinai is interested in them, even if he doesn’t care about what they’re trying to sell. He’s hired two sales staffers this year based on their calls to him.

Sinai finds this way of recruiting to be better than more traditional ways like using online job sites. He has a staff of four including the salespeople who cold-called him.

Newsletter

Today's breaking news and more in your inbox

I'm interested in (please check all that apply)
Are you a paying subscriber to the newspaper *
   

Starting at $4.62/week.

Subscribe Today