I continue to hear stories of Navy Nukes trying to get into Commercial Nuclear via a national recruiter. None successfully, from what I'm hearing. If there are any positive stories, please add to my posting. I feel this is an important addition to what is being taught at TAPs.
While the service is free to you as a job seeker, someone has to pay the recruiter once you accept a job that they "found" for you. Where does that money come from? How do they work? Honestly, I'm not 100% sure. However, in my experience, they simply "found" jobs just as I was doing...via Internet website job/careers updates on a company's website. I was offered NO opportunities that represented a Utility asking a Recruiter to find someone for them. In fact, upon contacting the company, they usually asked me why a Recruiter was involved. The benefit to this service is that a recruiter will do an exhaustive job search for you in areas/companies you may not have thought to look.
First Scenario. Compare two E-6s getting out and trying to get into a Commercial Utility. Sailor A posts his/her resume to a company's website and patiently waits for a response. Sailor B gives his/her resume to a recruiter and asks them to do all the work for them. The recruiter emails HR directly because they are all networked together. However, upon receipt of Sailor B's resume, the HR Rep knows this one comes with a high price tag (e.g., 30% of the job offer salary you accept). Sailor B, who likely has the same qualifications as Sailor A is 30% more expensive. Who does the utility hire? Are you, Sailor B, honestly worth 30% more than Sailor A?
Second Scenario. You're tired of nuclear and want to see what non-nuclear companies love to hire nukes. Wow...sky is the limit right? Where do you start? National Recruiter, perhaps. I was offered several great non-nuclear jobs from companies that I had not even considered. It was a fun addition to my post-Navy job search. However, I specifically told the Recruiter that I did NOT need their help looking for Commercial Nuclear jobs...but "what else is out there?"
Finally, salary. Is a National Recruiter's job database filled with $100K+ jobs? No. My guess is that they average $50-$75K. So, when you tell the Recruiter that you're only interested in $85K jobs, what is he/she going to negotiate with you? They have a better chance of getting paid if you agree to a $50K/year job, which are plentiful in their database. If you want that $100K/year job and think you can get it, be VERY CLEAR with them on your salary requirements. If you don't get any calls, than perhaps you need to reset your expectations.
In the end, using a recruiter is ONE TOOL. It has it's positive and negative drawbacks, so understand how to utilize these services. However, be advised that in this era of "plentiful nuclear jobs", company recruiters have a database of resumes being uploaded everyday, so why should they pay $30,000 for someone to simply upload your resume for you?
Disclaimer: I'm one person with one post-Navy job search experience. If you have positive/negative additions, feel free to chime in.
Happy Job Searching.
Co60