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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  • Catherine's insight mirrors my experience - this is a sales job not a HR job for most (and you only have to look up on linkedIn the backgrounds of most people who work in this sector - its not HR that's for sure.) They are heavily pressurised, target driven and largely placement is (at the Adviser/HRBP level) a commodity product. HR and Finance have driven down the margins we are prepared to pay for these recruitment services and therefore its all about placing the maximum number of candidates as easily as possible. If we (HR) are paying 8-12% for a placement then the candidates cant expect a dedicated targeted service.

    In some ways candidates such as yourself do not "fit" any easily describable "Box" and therefore its harder for the agency to see how they can easily place you. You are heavily qualified, and getting more so, you have both big blue chip experience and also niche, but you are looking for anything from a HR Adviser to HRBP role...Therefore rather than spend time working with you over weeks / months to find the "right" job they move on to find the next easily placeable candidate.

    I have often wondered in a quieter moment if there was an alternative market where by instead of the employers paying the fee that the candidate did. Employing a professional "job search" person to help them secure a role. But I think the cost would be too huge for most people as the level of personal service needed would mean Consultants could only work with very few candidates.

    In terms of Part Time - I have found HR to be very open to PT work - BUT (and its a big but) most of the HR part time jobs go to internal people as there is such a demand given the demographic of HR people. So relatively few HR jobs go external. I know a relatively large (compared to say finance) number of HR people who work flexibly, part time, compressed hours etc - but again these are al largely internal - they started as full time.

    As for regulation - I am not sure this would add any value at all? What would you regulate them on? It is we (HR/Finance) who have set the parameters they work in and we who are "happy" with the service they provide. As Catherine started with - we are the customer not the candidate (bluntly) and we either get the service we ant or w use someone else.
  • Dear Keith,

    Thank you very much for your insight, and for taking the time to respond to me. Very much appreciated.

    Kindest regards

    Paula
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