Thursday, May 22, 2014

7 Critical Issues Regarding LinkedIn (Part 6 of 7)


Issue #6: Will the rising cost of a Recruiter Corporate account price independent recruiters out of the market?

LinkedIn was built by recruiters.  It was not built by the millions of individuals who have a few connections (more than 1/3 of LinkedIn® members have one or fewer connections); it was built by recruiters with thousands of direct connections.

Even today, if all recruiters closed their accounts, LinkedIn would be a shell of itself and the networks of its members would shrivel. 

Unfortunately, by pricing their flagship Recruiter Corporate at $8,639.40 per year, most recruiters who do not already have a Recruiter Corporate account cannot afford the price of entry.

So while large corporations, through volume discounts might pay $1,500.00 per year per account, the little guy takes a beating.

True, LinkedIn offers lower-priced products – but, they also offer fewer features and are less effective.

LinkedIn is also reducing the capabilities with the Recruiter Corporate account.  Earlier this year they started charging for InMail messages sent through Recruiter to group members.  For recruiters who heavily use InMail this represents a significant price increase without raising the base price. 

In 2013 they removed a key sorting feature, making it more time-consuming to identify potential recruits. 

It’s fair to say that if LinkedIn continues to see itself as a monopoly, and set its pricing accordingly, when the old guard recruiters retire you will know why it’s tough to find a knowledgeable recruiter.

Solutions


What can LinkedIn do?


Plenty.  They could start by re-instating features of the Recruiter account that they have removed. 

From a pricing standpoint, I don’t think they care if independent recruiters can afford it, if they can find enough corporations who are willing to commit.  So far, that doesn’t seem to be a problem as their Talent Solutions products are growing at a faster pace than the rest of LinkedIn and will exceed $1B in sales in 2014.

As a public company, LinkedIn answers to Wall Street.  Wall Street wants results today, not in 2019.  If LinkedIn’s growth levels out, the more pressure there will be to raise prices even further. 

If they continue to grow, they won’t be reducing prices – why should they?  If their growth should slow, there will be more pressure to raise prices to satisfy Wall Street. 

They won’t be reducing prices until there is an alternative to LinkedIn.


What can individual members do?


Unfortunately, existing recruiters can’t realistically protest by cancelling their account – the price for re-entry would be much steeper AND since their data in their Recruiter account cannot be exported, all of their data in the account would be lost.  In addition, Recruiter account contracts are for one year – they would still have to pay for the remaining months even if they were not using it.

Regardless of the type of account a recruiter may use - anywhere from a free account up to Recruiter Corporate, almost all recruiters use LinkedIn because it is a treasure trove of potential clients and candidates.  Even though larger companies have a significant price advantage, the independent recruiters will continue to use LinkedIn until there is a better option.

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