Availability of Part-time HR Manager roles in London

Dear All,

RE:  Part-time HR manager roles in London.

I wonder if anybody has been through similar scenarios, and if so, how on earth did you manage to resolve it?

I am a seasoned HR professional with experience of working as part of a global HR team at a large multinational bank in the City, this was followed by significant experience of working in a stand-alone HR manager role at a niche Central London-based asset management boutique where I sat and professionalise their HR function from zero.  I am a Chartered Member of the CIPD, have an MSc in HR Development and Consultancy and I am currently doing a PhD in Organisational Psychology.  I am now looking for a part-time (2-3 days/week) role in HR (really....I would consider any role from: HR advisor through to HR manager/HRBP).  I am not afraid of rolling up my sleeves and putting together paper files and dealing with excel spreadsheets rather than custom-made databases, etc..  Quite happy to deal with transactional/operational work as well as advising senior management.  The challenge is that this type of part-time work appears to be like trying to find a needle in a haystack!  So much for HR coaching and preaching to the business on the wonders of working flexibly!

In addition to the above, recruitment agencies, their consultants, and their wall of silence do not make the process of part-time HR job searching very easy to navigate.  I have dealt with recruitment consultants both from an employer's perspective in which they are only too happy to phone you several times a day and meet up with you at the drop of a hat, and also as a candidate.  The latter scenario is a very different narrative to the former.  As a candidate, recruitment consultants are quite happy to phone you at the last minute to attend an interview at short notice, but then they completely ignore you, do not return your calls, not even meet with you prior to sending you for interviews with one of their clients...My question is: What is this behaviour all about?  At a very basic level, 'acknowledgement' is something that is at the core of our very own identity as human beings (i.e.: who we are).  These walls of silence are not only disrespectful but a serious professional concern that should also worry future employers.  Do they want to be represented by these people?  Do these consultants forget that at a certain point in their lives the shoe may move to the other foot?  If so, I wonder how would they feel about being treated like they treat job applicants? 

I would wholeheartedly appreciate to hear from colleagues that have experienced similar situations (seeking for part-time work in HR in London, dealing with non-responsive recruitment consultants) that have successfully emerged from them.  Also, does anybody know if recruitment consultants are regulated in any way?  If they aren't, they should be!  

Thank you in advance.

Yours sincerely,

Paula

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  • Hi Paula,

    Whilst I cannot comment on your first paragraph, I was a recruitment consultant before moving to HR.

    To answer the question "What is this behaviour all about?" it is a very simple answer. Money. The client pays the bills. Candidates do not. If targets are not met in terms of calls made, client meetings or arranged interviews many recruitment firms will cut a consultant's bonus. It is a sales job at the end of the day and if there is a choice between making a phone call that might make them meet target or a call to someone who sent in a CV that was going to get an interview, which do you think they will do?

    And quite frankly about the shoe being on the other foot... they don't have time to care. I would get a written warning if I didn't average 80 business development calls a day, 5 client visits a week etc. I was fresh from university and wanted to get money.

    There are many others who write at length about recruitment more eloquently than I can. Additionally, a number of writers (look up Liz Ryan in particular) give advice about working with agencies.

    As regards regulation, there is the REC. It is voluntary and whilst you can contact them, they can only take action against members.
  • Dear Catherine,

    I really appreciate your frank response and insight.
    Kindest regards

    Paula
  • Hi Paula

    As you say - the irony of HR being the people who should be promoting flexible working and the difficulty of finding it in HR1 There is a growing number of agencies focusing specifically on reduced hours/flexible working (you can find the long list on my twitter profile here: twitter.com/.../lists).

    Some of the key players are Oakleaf Partnership who specialise in HR roles and have set up a dedicated part-time desk which is very dynamic but still struggling to build up sufficient part-time roles (reflection on the market not on them); Availexe which is a newcomer to the party but seems enthusiastic; Capability Jane - one of the earliest pioneers but now operating very much as a job board which can get frustrating and 2to3 days aiming at returning mothers and SMEs but you could get lucky!

    Best wishes, Anna
  • Dear Anna,

    Thank you very much for your reply, very much appreciated. Your response, Keith's (below), and my own recent experience signal that there is - clearly - a very limited *external* market for part-time HR roles in London. Perhaps naively I thought that being flexible to opportunities ranging from HR advisor to HRBP would make my search for a part-time position a little bit easier, but I was wrong.

    I am extremely grateful to everybody who has taken the time to respond and share their insights/experience.

    Yours very sincerely,

    Paula
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  • Dear Anna,

    Thank you very much for your reply, very much appreciated. Your response, Keith's (below), and my own recent experience signal that there is - clearly - a very limited *external* market for part-time HR roles in London. Perhaps naively I thought that being flexible to opportunities ranging from HR advisor to HRBP would make my search for a part-time position a little bit easier, but I was wrong.

    I am extremely grateful to everybody who has taken the time to respond and share their insights/experience.

    Yours very sincerely,

    Paula
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