Posts tagged: Verify Recruitment

Management flexibilty is the key to Ireland’s future success, says Verify Partners

Media release

Management flexibilty is the key to Ireland’s future success, says Verify Partners

The Verify Partners

 

3rd June, 2010; Dublin, Ireland: Verify Partners, a new interim management and consulting company was formally launched today at the Irish Management Institute in Sandyford Dublin.  Verify Partners, provide Irish companies with access to experienced independent and flexible senior business executives across a broad range of skill including HR, ICT, finance, taxation, business change, marketing, and international business development.

Verify Partners is a new sister company to Verify Recruitment, the innovative IT recruitment company founded by Cathal Grogan. His view is that “we need to up our game if Ireland is going to remain a leader in attracting foreign direct investment. The key is providing a highly experienced and flexible local management support structure that allows the foreign company to rapidly establish their operations, overcome inherent cultural differences and to quickly reap the proven benefits of basing their business in Ireland”.

Bernadette Kiely, is a key member of Verify Partners, and was instrumental in establishing Motorola’s initial operations in Ireland, she said: “overseas companies need more than just access to low corporation tax and subsidies. This was fine when these incentives were enough to close the deal. However, the world has changed. In an increasingly competitive environment, they are now looking at how they can create profitable businesses that will achieve a rapid and sustained return on their investment in Ireland”.

Verify Partners believe that future employment of senior managers will be based on flexible engagements. Pensions, careers paths, share options, benefits packages etc may become a thing of the past for many senior managers in the private sector. Executives will need to constantly up skill, remain very flexible and fleet of foot, be prepared to go where the work is. Careers will consist of many short term assignments rather than a slow transition up the ranks of one company.

“Immediate access to flexible top class management talent at a local level is very important”, said Ronan Farren, a Verify Partner and a Silicon Valley veteran. “The US has it right. We also need to prove that Ireland has a similar culture of flexibility and of high performance at a management level.  Being able to tap such talent not only will speed up the insertion of a Foreign Direct Investment project into Ireland by many months, but will also enable the company to better compete and win business in-theatre, replicating its “home” operations, thus generating quicker returns on investment”.

This is not necessarily a bad thing – this level of flexibility and a lack of dependence on the corporate HQ organisation will certainly help to regain Ireland’s competitiveness and can lead to interesting and continuously challenging careers for the individuals involved. It cam also great boost Ireland’s GDP, a recent study by McKinsey (the management consultants) and the London School of Economics was recently presented to the IMI, which found that improving management practice in Irish companies could add 1% or over €2 billion to Irish GDP.

For more details visit www.verifypartners.com or contact business@verifypartners.com

For more information please contact Simon Palmer of Republic on: +353 (0) 1210 3520 or email: simon@republicpr.ie.

Notes to Editors

Verify Recruitment opened in Dublin in May 2009 and is led by Cathal Grogan. Cathal has 20 years experience in the IT industry, and has held senior positions in Program & Project Management, Product Management, Management Consulting, and Change Management in local and multi-national organisations, within Enterprise Software, Financial Services, Contact Centre and Automotive industries – www.verifyrecruitment.com

A list of biographies of key members of Verify Partners is attached.

Areas of Special Interest

FDI: We are in discussion with inward investment agencies in Ireland about helping them to attract and work with FDI clients from the emerging BRIC markets (namely Brazil, Russia, India and China) through the provision of a ‘swat team’ of senior resources from Verify Partners who can help to fast track the FDI company into Ireland.

Corporate Governance and Risk Management: A number of Verify Partners are experts in the area of Corporate Governance and Risk management. These skill sets are in particular demand as Irish companies learn the lessons from recent history. We can help to put the right processes and procedures in place, however, good corporate governance must come from the top and permeate every aspect of a company’s operations.

Banking: Until now, Irish banks have focused management attention on the very large loans going into NAMA. The next issue will be how to deal with the huge number of loans between €1-5 million that are going to have to be managed with great care. Verify Partners have the asset management and business experience to help manage these assets to ensure they can remain performing thus preventing foreclosure.

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Funding shortfall hits IT market

The problems with FAS are well documented but what people don’t realise is that now, when the economy is on its knees, is when FAS are need most.

Okay, so a book could be written on the mismanagement at the state training agency but, this does not mean we still don’t need it, FAS still has a role in helping important sectors, such as IT. And we need it to fulfill its duties to those who are out of work and whom need retraining in order that the country has a skilled workforce that is needed to attract the right and retain the IT companies that our economy needs.

In the article below, which was printed in the Sunday Business Post yesterday, Cathal Grogan of Verify Recruitment talks about how the problems with FAS are affecting the IT sector. I have pasted the article in below, but here is a link to article: http://www.sbpost.ie/post/pages/p/story.aspx-qqqt=RECRUITMENT-qqqs=themarket-qqqid=47332-qqqx=1.asp

Funding shortfall hits IT market (article from The Sunday Business Post)

Sunday, February 14, 2010

With scandals at Fás still fresh in people’s minds, the effects have reverberated across the wider economy and unemployed IT contractors are the latest to feel the effects.

Unable to meet the high cost of private training courses in skills such as project management, contractors would ordinarily turn to the state training agency for assistance. However, Fás is no longer funding courses in areas like Princ€2 or IT Infrastructure Library (ITIL). For job-seekers, the problem is that more employers are seeking candidates with these qualifications.

‘‘Our candidates are typically people with lots of experience and who find themselves between jobs,” said Cathal Grogan, managing director of Verify Recruitment. ‘‘They are applying for positions and employers are not only looking for experience, but also some sort of accreditation for their skills.”

Clara Gough, IT consultant with Robert Walters Recruitment Agency, said the requirement was also being applied to broader IT skills such as Microsoft certification.

‘‘Where the hiring manager feels there is a good pool of candidates in the market, they use this as a filter,” she said.

However, job-seekers looking to take some of the higher level Fás courses are faced with long waiting lists. Moreover, there are no clear guidelines as to whether IT contractors, who are often self-employed, qualify to receive funding.

‘‘It’s a grey area as to whether or not they are eligible,” said Grogan. ‘‘That has led to a lot of candidates coming to us and asking us for Princ€2 or ITIL courses, but those can cost anything from €1,200 to a couple of thousand euro.”

Jim Friars, chief executive of the Irish Computer Society, said he was disappointed at the Fás decision. He said training and certification in professional skills were ‘‘essential’’ to economic recovery. Such skills include not only project management, but also data protection.

‘‘We believe that the government needs to strike a balance and to assign a high priority to professional-level skills,” Friars said.

While some third level, government funded initiatives facilitate unemployed people taking part in degree programmes, Friars said industry driven programmes were necessary.

He said that courses like the Data Protection Practitioner’s Certificate and European Certificate of Informatics Professionals (EUCIP), certified by the ICS should receive the same government support as university courses.

Some training firms have responded by dropping prices to fill the gap left by Fás. Last month, IT service management specialist ESMI developed a Princ€2 Practitioner certification course for an offer rate of €795.These courses keep costs low by combining self-study with instructor-led tuition.

Verify is offering the same course at €695 as part of its Upskill Programme of professional development courses.

The full price would normally be more than €1,100.

A spokesperson for Clear Learning, formerly known as Calyx Training, said it had also reduced its prices by up to 30 per cent to allow out-of-work IT professionals to attend courses.

Friars welcomed these moves, but said they would not be enough.

“An IT professional, who is between jobs, still requires support to ensure that they are quickly returned to the workforce and continue to contribute their skills and expertise, so we would call on Fás to reinstate a funding programme for professional level courses as soon as possible,” he said.

Dr Bryan Fields, director of training services with Fás, said its change in strategy to focus on the long-term unemployed meant that self-employed IT contractors were not a priority group.

Around two thirds of Fás’s 600 free training courses cover IT subjects. The agency also operates a technical employment support grant (TESG) to fund people taking courses that aren’t available from Fás.

‘‘Some 11,000 people availed of this last year,” said Fields.

He also said Fás was addressing high-level skills and was in the process of developing a blended learning course in project management. Initially, this will be aimed at former Dell employees in Limerick who were made redundant last year.

The course will be free of charge to those still unemployed, but will not be exclusive to ex-Dell workers.

‘‘If we get a lot of interest, we would look at extending it,” said Fields.

He said Fás wanted to work with IT professionals who have recently been laid off.

‘‘If you have been let go from a company and haven’t had work for four or five months, we would be anxious to get you into a training course or night course,” he said.

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IT crucial for recovery in recession

This is an interesting article on Verify Recruitment that appeared The Sunday Business Post yesterday. Verify Recruitment is a specialist recruitment agency that focuses on jobs in the IT sector that require experienced professionals.

The full article has been past in below but you can follow this link to the Sunday Business Post’s website #mce_temp_url#

IT crucial for recovery in recession
31 January 2010 By Carol Hayes

The middle of a recession may not seem like the most obvious time to launch a recruitment firm, but Cathal Grogan believes his new firm can change recruitment practices in the IT sector.

Grogan, the managing director of Verify Recruitment, decided to focus on IT because he sees it as crucial to the future growth of the economy.

‘‘It is one of the few sectors of the economy that is still expanding, and it is the engine that will drive the country out of the recession. For this to be achieved, we need to have experienced individuals with a track record of success in establishing, growing and expanding cutting-edge companies,” he said.

Grogan believes that traditional recruitment companies do not have the skills to deal with the changing requirements of employers in the IT sector.

To solve that problem, Verify has appointed a panel of executives who will advise the firm in sourcing, assessing and reviewing candidates before they are referred for a client’s vacancy.

The panel includes people from the financial services, telecommunications, retail and software sectors, according to Grogan. Verify will also specialise only in filling positions that for candidates with more than ten years’ professional experience.

‘‘The panel will review candidates from their own area of expertise, in order to verify the skills and experience of everyone we recommend and ensure they are the exact fit for our clients.

‘‘Expert skills can only be assessed by those who are experts themselves,” said Grogan.

Grogan studied biotechnology at Dublin City University, qualifying in 1990. However, he soon realised that he did not want to spend his career in a lab coat, so he looked at other sectors.

‘‘At that time, a lot of the IT consulting houses were offering graduate training schemes, whereby they offered positions to graduates from a diverse range of disciplines and gave them training on their IT technologies and methodologies. I joined EDS and went to work for them initially in Britain,” said Grogan.

He spent nine years with the company, working for them in England, Scotland, Germany and Ireland in a variety of roles, including engineering and project management.

He then moved to dotcom firm Enba, which was planning to launch Europe’s first internet bank.

‘‘Participating in the dotcom boom was an experience that couldn’t be bought,” according to Grogan. ‘‘I remember sitting in management meetings as the latest valuation was announced – €100 million, €300 million, €1 billion. It was a rollercoaster.”

However, Enba collapsed after the dotcom bubble burst.

Grogan moved on to Dublin software firm Point Information Systems, running its product management and marketing team. When Point was acquired by an American technology firm S1, Grogan’s next move was to AIB, where he worked on the bank’s phone banking business.

He remained with the bank until the middle of last year, when he set about creating Verify.

It works with people seeking jobs and companies that are hiring. The firm is focused on the Dublin area but plans to offer its services across the rest of the country next year.

‘‘We have worked with leading payment providers, e-commerce companies, global financial services organisations, large shared service centres and enterprise software vendors,” said Grogan.

‘‘Our typical client company is one that is either about to embark on a complex business initiative or is facing a particular complex technology. We also get approached when the role is confidential. There are a lot of unadvertised positions out there.”

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