Good suggestion. Do you know if other EA orgs have tried it out and if so, how it panned out? It seems a little odd to do, if you assume that the referee and the relevant organisation have broadly aligned interests.
My experience with it is confined to the SF tech world, where it is extremely common. Though usually it is offered to employees of the hiring company only. Maybe you could limit it to a group of people you then email about it.
This seems common for lower-level roles, but I donāt know that Iāve seen it for CEO-type roles. When I think about SF tech companies and the amount they pay to CEOs, the idea of a āreferral bonusā of the usual size seems āof the wrong scaleā: āThanks for helping us find this friend of yours who was worth millions to us. Hereās $5,000 for you, friend of an elite executive.ā
(Compare to the standard āyour old roommate actually was good at programming! Hereās a small bonus,ā which is how I picture internal recruiting processes [e.g. Google asking employees to help them find new developers].)
But of course, these firms will also shell out tens of thousands of dollars to recruiting firms for executive searches, so a referral bonus isnāt far from an unreasonable expense in that context.
Yes, the way that worked in consulting for me was that the referral bonus was (very approximately) something like 10% of the hireās salary. So if someone very senior got hired, you could maybe double your annual paycheck. Not sure that would be appropriate for FHI though...
Ought (~$5000) and Rethink Priorities (~$500) have both done it, with bounties roughly what I indicated (though Iām a bit uncertain). Donāt think either has completed the relevant hiring rounds yet.
Have you considered offering a referral bonus to anyone bringing your attention to a candidate you hadnāt considered?
Good suggestion. Do you know if other EA orgs have tried it out and if so, how it panned out? It seems a little odd to do, if you assume that the referee and the relevant organisation have broadly aligned interests.
My experience with it is confined to the SF tech world, where it is extremely common. Though usually it is offered to employees of the hiring company only. Maybe you could limit it to a group of people you then email about it.
This seems common for lower-level roles, but I donāt know that Iāve seen it for CEO-type roles. When I think about SF tech companies and the amount they pay to CEOs, the idea of a āreferral bonusā of the usual size seems āof the wrong scaleā: āThanks for helping us find this friend of yours who was worth millions to us. Hereās $5,000 for you, friend of an elite executive.ā
(Compare to the standard āyour old roommate actually was good at programming! Hereās a small bonus,ā which is how I picture internal recruiting processes [e.g. Google asking employees to help them find new developers].)
But of course, these firms will also shell out tens of thousands of dollars to recruiting firms for executive searches, so a referral bonus isnāt far from an unreasonable expense in that context.
Yes, the way that worked in consulting for me was that the referral bonus was (very approximately) something like 10% of the hireās salary. So if someone very senior got hired, you could maybe double your annual paycheck. Not sure that would be appropriate for FHI though...
Ought (~$5000) and Rethink Priorities (~$500) have both done it, with bounties roughly what I indicated (though Iām a bit uncertain). Donāt think either has completed the relevant hiring rounds yet.