Daily News

View All News

Asia – Robert Walters – the accidental recruiter

22 April 2014

Robert Walters, eponymous CEO of international recruitment firm Robert Walters, is candid when asked what it takes to become a global business services provider and how he ended up in the industry.

He said simply that he was “lucky”, adding that “it all began by total chance”.

Speaking with Asia Focus, Mr Walters explained: “It was really an accident. I was a failed accountant and went stumbling into an agency called Michael Page. I joined them and spent a very happy eight years with the company, including the two years setting up the New York office. I resigned in 1984 and founded my own company in the following year.”

According to Mr Walters, becoming part of the recruitment and business services field, for him and many others back then, was definitely not a planned decision. The field of headhunting and recruitment was not really considered a business in its own right, particularly for those who specialised in recruiting junior to middle-management professional positions.

A graduate with a degree in economics and politics, Mr Walters was very glad he got the opportunity to explore the business and exercise his education, training and experience in a different way. For him, the prospect for professionalising the recruitment business made it a very attractive opportunity that he wanted to stick with.

“I think I’m very lucky. This is something that should be clear to everyone that when people plan their careers there is one huge factor which is luck, and that’s something you can’t plan for. However, that luck determines everything. So by fortune, I ended up in an industry that was growing enormously. It is still continuing to emerge and I can ride that wave,” he explained.

The recruitment industry, he added, is not one for those seeking to make a quick dollar, but for long-term prospects. Mr Walters sees his company and others like it building something that is “very significant” and that is what he wants to be a part of.

Just two years after he founded the company, Robert Walters had already expanded abroad. In 1987, the first international office was opened in Brussels and more followed  in Europe, North America and the Asia Pacific region.

“Working in different cultures is the thing that I am most interested in my career,” said Mr Walters. “It is a fact that if you go to new places, you need to adapt the way you work. From my recent visit to Tokyo, I ran out of business cards; it felt like walking into a meeting without your trousers on. These cultural norms and perceptions are very detailed but they are very important to understand.”

In Mr Walters’ view working in other countries enhances a person’s knowledge and skills as well as broadening their perspective considerably. In order to compete in the world where things are changing at a breath-taking pace, it is very important for people to be well prepared to deal with different challenges that can come in many different forms.

“In the Japanese market, moving jobs is still very new for people. The job mentality is very different and people are likely to have high loyalty for the organisation,” he observed. “However in China, people tend to move jobs for another dollar. Meanwhile, in Thailand, Vietnam and Indonesia, these markets have huge populations with a limited number of recruitment firms. Therefore the potential for growth is very high which offers us a great opportunity to tap.”

In Asean markets in particular, Mr Walters sees the region as a candidate-driven market. The demand for candidates with good English and communication skills is very high, given that companies are looking for people who can perform internationally. Therefore, those with an international educational background are in a high demand.

He also noted that being a multinational company does help attract clients in terms of the level of credibility and reputation of the brand. However, in the recruitment and services field there are always prominent local players in every market, particularly in niche areas.

Despite the great success the company is currently experiencing, Mr Walters still considers the business at the beginning stage, adding that there are a lot of opportunities for the entire industry to grow: “The industry is virgin territory, [the growth] will be exponential. However, it cannot grow that fast, we have to do things that are according to the DNA of the culture.”

Drawing a comparison to the accounting industry, Mr Walters believes there is no reason why his company cannot be as big as PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) in terms of scale. However, he noted that it would take quite some time for the industry to reach that point. “We are still tiny; it is nothing compared to what we can do. Right now we are only at chapter one.”