Recruiter fee agreement?
I received a call from a recruiter, who mentioned that his firm wanted me to sign an agreement that should I be placed in some firm and do not stay the minimum 90 to 120 days, I would be liable to them for "a percentage of the percentage" of their fee, which is between 20% to 30% of the salary. I haven't seen this agreement yet (I'm not sure that I want to). Is this standard?
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[ 2.7 ms ] story [ 23.9 ms ] threadEven if it was legal, I would run as fast as I could in the other direction. Think of it this way: what happens if you start the job and come to find out the company is into some shady business and you wanted to quit?
One thing I neglected to mention to this recruiter: I free-lance as an expert witness in computer forensics cases. I've done this for a labor lawyer in the state where this firm operates. I will forward this "agreement" to the lawyer.
To put this agreement in perspective, this recruiter has reduced their direct financial incentive to match you to the right company.
For a $80,000 a year job, they're looking at $16,000 for placing you. If they charge you 20% of that if you don't work out, that's $3200. If they spend 40 hours placing you, that's not a bad yearly income - if they just shotgun your resume, they can make real money.
And if the salary, fee, and your percentage are significantly higher, they can make really good money.