Your Step-by-Step Guide for Working with an Allied Recruiter

As a career traveler, your recruiter is one of your most valuable assets. They advocate for your skills to find positions that best utilize your strengths in the locations you want most. Working with a recruiter is incredibly beneficial for obtaining offers, building your professional network, and always having a support system behind you. Knowing how to work with them properly allows both you and your recruiter to reap the most benefits from your relationship. Here is our step-by-step guide to working with a travel healthcare recruiter: 

1. Plan Ahead and do your research

Before starting any position, it’s crucial to set your expectations and make realistic plans. This means having an idea of the time you want to commit, salary requirements, and states you’re interested in relocating to. Knowing this information ahead of time makes your recruiter’s job easier and sets the ball rolling for finding you an ideal position. Additionally, research the agencies you plan to work with. The agencies will connect you with your recruiter, so it’s important to find one you can trust. 

2. Share your preferences for travel contracts

After providing some general information about yourself and your interests, the agency will put you in touch with a recruiter to start the formal application process. During this time, tell the recruiter more about yourself and your ambitions. This is a good time to establish where you want to work, how long you want to take off between contracts, if you need housing, and anything else you feel is important for them to know. Giving the recruiter your expectations upfront can prevent any breakdowns in communication or issues with getting submitted to jobs. 

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3. Interview your allied healthcare recruiter

Your recruiter is your point of contact for almost anything – you can ask questions about your contract, get help with benefits or timesheets, and vent to them after a particularly rough shift. Working with an allied healthcare recruiter whose personality meshes well with yours is crucial to having a successful travel career. Don’t be afraid to interview your recruiter a bit and get to know them and their personality from the get-go. Your recruiter is your partner in the travel healthcare world, so it’s important that you can trust them. Get to know their personality, whether they are hands-on or hands-off, how long they have been in the business, and anything else that will help you understand who they are. 

4. Have realistic expectations

At the end of the day, being an allied healthcare recruiter is a job with key performance metrics that most agencies require, to provide the best service possible. While some recruiters will truly answer you 24/7, you can’t expect all recruiters to answer the phone at 3am after a tough shift. This isn’t to say that you can’t call in the middle of the night when there’s an emergency, but it’s important to have realistic expectations set with your recruiter. 

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