Candidate Ownership, Which Agency Should Get The Introduction Fee?

Candidate ownership is a frequent problem for recruitment agencies but when two agencies each claim that they have introduced the same candidate, how does the client decide which is entitled to the fee?

Unfortunately, in this case, it is common for both agencies to pursue the client for an introduction fee for the same candidate placement. Faced with the prospect of paying two fees, often equating to 50% of the candidate’s remuneration in aggregate, clients will often prefer to retract an offer of employment rather than pay both agencies.

Clearly this situation is of benefit to no one involved as the client does not hire the suitable candidate; the candidate does not receive a job offer and neither agency attracts the introduction fee.

It is important for businesses to attract the right candidates at the recruitment stage to avoid high staff turnover which can adversely affect productivity and moral. With this in mind, it is helpful for businesses to understand the legal and contractual stance that should underline good recruitment practice.

When two agencies claim ownership of the same candidate, there are two basic principles which will determine which agency is entitled to be paid; ‘contract law’ and the ‘effective cause’ principle.

Contract law

When a recruitment agency submits a candidate’s details to a client, it is offering a contractual agreement typically based on the agency’s standard terms and conditions of business. As this is a contractual offer, the client is entitled to accept or reject it. By acting on the introduction and arranging to interview the candidate, the client has affectively accepted the offer and the agency will ordinarily be entitled to claim an introduction fee.

If two agencies introduce the same candidate for a position, the client is free to accept one introduction and reject the other. There may be several reasons why a client will choose one introduction over the other but often, it will come down to four main points:

  • Agency approach and candidate suitability.
  • Which agency has the most robust screening and compliance processes.
  • Commercial terms.
  • Working relationship, industry expertise or previous experience with the client.

In this instance, it is highly advisable for the client to ensure they inform the unsuccessful agency that the introduction has been rejected. If the client does not inform the unsuccessful agency that it has rejected the offer, the agency may assume acceptance and continue to claim ownership, despite having done nothing more than submit a CV.

Informing an agency that their introduction has not been accepted allows the client to move forward with the selected agency without any confusion regarding introduction of the candidate. Clearly if there is no other agency involved and the client proceeds to interview and engages the candidate, the selected agency making the introduction may still be entitled to claim a fee, subject to their contractual terms and conditions of business.

Unfortunately, it is often the case that clients do not actively reject duplicated introductions from their agency suppliers. As a result, it becomes necessary to work out which agency is the ‘effective cause’ of the hire.

An Ethical Approach

Contract law and the effective cause principle protect clients and the recruitment industry from unscrupulous agencies. An ethical agency will of course respect a client’s decision to use another agency, avoiding any dispute over fees.

With the UK seeing a real shortage of skilled workers across multiple sectors (IT & Technology, Finance, Construction & Engineering) which continues to impact recruitment, it is important that businesses have a clear understanding of these principles so they can screen agencies and encourage ethical recruitment practice.

Good recruitment practice is of benefit to all parties involved ensuring the best candidate is hired, the best agency is paid and the client is satisfied and confident in the recruitment process to meet the needs of the business.