The old cliche that people decide whether or not to hire someone within the first few seconds of an interview horrifies Vikki Sly, global recruitment director at business intelligence software provider, QlikTech.
For Sly, the art of recruitment is something that successful companies, big and small, should take very seriously and must also take their time over.
Although Sly always knew that she was good with people, at the outset of her career, she wasn’t sure what profession would best allow her to use her talent. So when she left university, she joined B&Q, attracted by its reputation for having a really good management training scheme.
But Sly found that, rather than deal with a high volume of placements, what she liked best was working with just a few clients and really getting to know them well. “I quickly realised that I tended to work with a few clients deeply rather than lots of clients,” she remembers.
It was a strategy that paid off and Sly became one of the agency’s big billers as a result. “I was getting more insight and intimacy with clients than my colleagues because I was interested in them,” she explains.
After years of working for third party employers, however, Sly decided to break out on her own and start her own business. “I thought, why not do this for myself? And I did, but to be honest I found it really lonely,” she admits.
But more than that, even though she was successful and earning a good salary, it didn’t feel like she was on the right career path. “When you are a partner, you are never completely intimate or as involved so the consequences of your decisions are not as meaningful,” Sly explains.
Luckily, however, one of her clients in the shape of Dell approached her to work for it and she jumped at the chance. So in 1998, she made her first entry into the IT industry.
From there, however, Sly moved to another high tech firm – web content management software provider, Vignette (which has since been bought by OpenText), and ended up standing in as interim HR director. “I took over the mantle when we needed a head of HR, but it’s not what I want to do,” she says.
A stint at HR software supplier, PeopleSoft (which is now owned by Oracle), followed, which like Dell, needed someone to set up and run its European recruitment operations.
Because she’d generally worked for companies that took their recruitment activities and investment in people seriously, however, she wanted to be sure that her potential new employer had the values and belief in its employees that it claimed.
What helped convince her though was the level of effort that the supplier put into engaging its workforce. For example, every new recruit was sent on a five-day induction course to learn about its history, values and culture.
Despite her focus on recruitment, Sly has always worked closely with HR leadership teams, undertaken a number of HR activities, including talent management and leadership development, and taken on various general business responsibilities such as handling M&A activity and working in the sales operation.
Nonetheless, despite the depth and breadth of her experience, it is still recruitment where Sly feels most at home.
And finally…
There isn’t one particular person. I have been really fortunate to work with some phenomenal leaders and I’ve seen the power of great leadership and have learned from them.
What’s your most hated buzzword?
‘We can drive this forward’. Driving is for cars. Why can’t people say: “We can make this happen.”
What’s the best piece of advice you’ve ever received?
‘Know what you don’t know.’ So that means being confident enough to ask about things that you don’t know.
How do you relax?
I cook and bake with my kids.