As a general rule of thumb, sending cold recruiting outreach to people you don’t know will be lower ROI as a startup. You don’t have much of a talent brand or validation yet, so your response rate will reflect this. Even at larger companies, this is often handled by full-time recruiters and sourcers, who spend 40 hours per week to make three hires per quarter.
We strongly recommend you to go back to 2a. Sourcing 1st-degree connections if you haven’t exhausted your network yet. If you have, or if you’re hiring for a role where your network isn’t as strong, there are a few strategies for expanding your network and turning your 2nd-degree connections into promising candidates. Expanding your network can also be a great way to find more diverse candidates.
The best approach to reaching more 2nd-degree connections is to leverage strong “1st-degree connector nodes” to build lists and reach out. A 1st-degree connector node is someone from your network who’s well-connected to other talented people. In a nutshell, you’ll expand your network by looking at their connections to source strong candidates, and then you’ll name-drop the connector node in your initial outreach.
There are a few important factors when choosing your 1st-degree connector nodes:
I learned this technique from a hiring manager at LinkedIn. When done right, it can be really effective.
Given that this is a cold-sourced candidate, who doesn’t know you, you may need to share a few more sentences about your company/opportunity. Here’s an example template:
<aside> ✉️ Hi {{first_name}},
I was going through [CONNECTOR NODE]’s connections and came across your profile. I was really excited about your work [INSERT PERSONALIZATION]
To introduce myself, I’m the co-founder and CEO at Gem. We just raised an exciting seed round from Accel and are working closely with customers like Dropbox, MuleSoft, Pinterest. We’re looking to build out our founding engineering team and you look like you’d fit right in!
If you’re interested in connecting or even in just a casual conversation let me know.
</aside>
As always, don’t copy these templates verbatim. It wouldn’t be great if every candidate starts seeing the exact same language. Use these as a starting point and make them your own.
At Gem, we used this as an opportunity to prioritize gender diversity for engineering and started with strong female engineers and engineering leaders from our network. These were classmates from school, advisors, angel investors, and some of our top peers and managers from previous companies.
This is how we ended up hiring our first out-of-network engineer (Einas Haddad). We name-dropped a few folks she was connected to within our initial reach-out, and she back-channeled with an engineer she knew/trusted. Many of our founding team knew the “connector node” from college, so naturally, she said great things about the team and the company, and Einas responded to meet up for coffee.
You could experiment with sourcing people you don’t know using other things that connect you to talent pools, such as your school, a previous company and/or internship, or a professional group you’re part of. These will probably be lower ROI than using people as connector nodes.
And of course, the same best practices for reaching out to 1st-degree connections (following up, sending as multiple co-founders, etc.) apply to 2nd-degree connections as well.