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Game industry recruitment agencies

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IvanKocic polycounter lvl 11
Can someone recommend some good recruitment agency in game industry.

Thanks in advance.

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  • almighty_gir
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    almighty_gir ngon master
    I can't speak for anyone else, but personally i've had nothing but bad experiences with recruiters, they've always lowballed my rates with clients and/or taken a huge cut of my rates for themselves.

    I always find it's better to speak for yourself directly with any studio. Whether you're contracting or looking for fulltime work, the only person who can represent you the way you are, is you.
  • LMP
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    LMP polycounter lvl 13
    I would avoid using any 3rd party recruiters. The only "recruiters" you want to talk to are are those that are directly employed by the developer in-house to find new people to add to the team.
  • radiancef0rge
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    radiancef0rge ngon master
    LMP wrote: »
    The only "recruiters" you want to talk to are are those that are directly employed by the developer in-house to find new people to add to the team.

    not true. a fair number of studios will NOT hire junior or mid level artists salaried and require that they are represented by a recruiting agency.

    If you limit yourself by not allowing someone to represent your work you are removing yourself from the job pool in many situations.
  • ExcessiveZero
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    ExcessiveZero polycounter lvl 6
    not true. a fair number of studios will NOT hire junior or mid level artists salaried and require that they are represented by a recruiting agency.

    If you limit yourself by not allowing someone to represent your work you are removing yourself from the job pool in many situations.

    A job pool, not thee job pool, its important to have standards, I would agree with LMP and Gir, working through an agency is silly, and if an employer only hires through an out of house agency which is going to take their artists money they are silly themselves.

    why would you want to pay a third party while artists get less, anyone you hire its going to breed zero loyalty when you are getting pittance for pay and as soon as they get skill or a better offer (which shouldn't be too hard with the agency taking their cut) they will jump ship.

    It makes zero sense for an an employer to hire third party agencies (while it does happen), you are either underpaying your employee or overpaying to cover the cost of the agency, its not a good solution for anyone except the third parties.
  • iconoplast
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    iconoplast polycounter lvl 13
    its not a good solution for anyone except the third parties.
    There are exceptions. Outsourcing the HR-type duties when a company is big enough to need that sort of support but not so big that it's worth having people for it full-time can be paying less to an agency than they would to have someone to do it onsite.
  • radiancef0rge
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    radiancef0rge ngon master
    A job pool, not thee job pool, its important to have standards,

    right so at the bare minimum every microsoft studio
  • Equanim
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    Equanim polycounter lvl 11
    This came up on CGTalk a while back. The impression I got is that, if you're working steadily as a freelancer, having an agent can be a huge advantage simply because while you're fulfilling contracts, they're networking, which should hopefully minimize your down time between jobs.

    Again though, that's provided the whole system is working correctly. If they're low-balling your rates, that's a real problem.
  • almighty_gir
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    almighty_gir ngon master
    I think you're right, Equanim. I think if you're looking to use an agency to land you your first job/s then you're likely to have a bad time. But if you've already got an established clientbase and reputation, having someone speaking on your behalf can help you save a lot of time finding new work.

    But as i said, none of my experiences with them have been positive.
  • IvanKocic
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    IvanKocic polycounter lvl 11
    Well, many agencies that I find actually say that they take money when they find an artist, not from you, but from companies that hire them. Of course that will lead to pay you less, but that is a way to enter the industry.

    If not agencies, then, what will be better option to enter the game industry? I must say that i live in Europe, in the country where there is no next gen companies, and the games they make here are actually big fish games, and when i tried 2 years ago, i spent 2 months, sending e- mails to every company that i could find on the internet, in Europe, and none hired me. I suppose that there are million mails each day coming their way.

    I just want to enter the game industry, and my salary right now is less than 1500$ (that is one of the highest in my country, sadly), so, i am used to work only to pay bills. I hope that one day everything will be better, but right now, i have to relocate from the movie industry, where it's really bad for modeling artists, to game industry.

    What would you suggest as the best way to do that.
  • IvanKocic
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    IvanKocic polycounter lvl 11
    Gir, i am confused now. If you have 7+ year of work, and have your clients, than you don't need agents, you have already found clients who trust you, who will give you work next time. But if you are new, isn't that the best time for someone to find you a job, because you don't know anyone, no one knows you, no one trusts you, you need someone to give your CV to the right people, and to help you in finding job. Later, you will have coworkers, who will give you a recommendation, you will have few shipped titles behind you... Why would you want in that moment to give money to someone, if it is easy for you to find new clients, or work for clients you have already worked for?

    But anyway, i am here to find my first job in game industry (4 year in movie industry, but i need entrance in game), so, what do you suggest as better strategy?
  • skylebones
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    skylebones polycounter lvl 10
    So here is an honest question, has anyone here landed a job through a third party recruiter?

    I don't know anyone at my studio that was hired that way.
    IvanKocic wrote: »
    But anyway, i am here to find my first job in game industry (4 year in movie industry, but i need entrance in game), so, what do you suggest as better strategy?

    Post your portfolio is a great place to start.
  • radiancef0rge
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    radiancef0rge ngon master
    So here is an honest question, has anyone here landed a job through a third party recruiter?

    I can name about 7 off the top of my head all for microsoft studios in washington.
  • Justin Meisse
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    Justin Meisse polycounter lvl 18
    That seems like a Microsoft quirk, AFAIK most of the other big studios don't require the use of recruiters. I can think of a about hundred people that work at a studio that requires college degrees, it doesn't mean it's the norm in the game industry.
  • iconoplast
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    iconoplast polycounter lvl 13
    I believe it's more common in the business side of things rather than the creative job openings.
  • ysalex
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    ysalex interpolator
    I've never had great experiences with recruiters and for a while now I don't write them back even for specific positions.

    I did once though, did get a handful of interviews.

    Strangely the only job I was ever offered from a recruiter based point of view was almost a year after the recruiter got me the interview, and it was clear that this time they were hoping to leave the recruiter out of it. Even though I didn't like that recruiter I thought it was a scummy move by the company, but I didn't want the job anyways.
  • GarageBay9
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    GarageBay9 polycounter lvl 13
    I can name about 7 off the top of my head all for microsoft studios in washington.

    Yeah, that's a Microsoft Games Studios thing.

    The only other major studios I know of that do things that way are up here in Microsoftville - Bungie, Arena.net, and very rarely Monolith and Zombie.

    Essentially the entire art team at Turn 10 (Forza Motorsport) is contract, either a- or v-. Basically just a handful of leads are FTE.
  • radiancef0rge
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    radiancef0rge ngon master
    pretty sure forza is just a-
    I think 343 is the only v-
  • slipsius
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    slipsius mod
    I think most large studios have their own recruiters. And from what I can tell, most studios dont like using third party recruiters cause they tend to not know what they are talking about.

    Though, I did hear they are more common in europe / UK.
  • GarageBay9
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    GarageBay9 polycounter lvl 13
    pretty sure forza is just a-
    I think 343 is the only v-

    Track leads and a few others were v- on FM5. Folks they wanted on continuously from early pre-production all the way to RTM. My track lead was v-, and a very seasoned Valve alum who I had a blast working with and learning from.
  • radiancef0rge
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    radiancef0rge ngon master
    huh interesting thanks for the info :) I always passed on those because of the a- limitations.
  • Xoliul
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    Xoliul polycounter lvl 14
    IvanKocic wrote: »
    But anyway, i am here to find my first job in game industry (4 year in movie industry, but i need entrance in game), so, what do you suggest as better strategy?

    Judging from your last thread, a much better portfolio, to put it bluntly.
  • IvanKocic
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    IvanKocic polycounter lvl 11
    Well, i am from Europe, and definitely i need few more years before i try American companies. I've got an impression that agencies were more common in Europe, and that's the place where i am looking for my first job in game industry, but as i can see, most users on this site are Americans, and probably few people have experience how it works here. So, probably i should try to search for job openings and studios in EU/UK and if i don't find any job, than try agencies. I can see that here is a list with like 30 agencies located in EU or UK, so, they would definitely not exist if the companies didn't call them (too bad that i can't find any ratings, which one is better).

    For the portfolio, i will definitely redesign it, i haven't put anything new since 2 years ago, and when i was building it, i stayed without a job, because the company suddenly almost went bankrupt, so, i had to put all i can in the shortest amount of time. I will try to delete the bad ones, and put some newer works if i can get a green light from companies I've been working for the last 2 years.

    I would also like to try to find a job in Asia. I suppose that there are many companies too, and maybe it is easier there than in America, but so far I don't know where to look for job opportunities.

    P.S. what does v-, a- mean?

    Thx you all for your great advices.
  • Karmageddon
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    Karmageddon polycounter lvl 7
    v- and a- (v dash and a dash) are tiers of employment at Microsoft. a- means you're contract, with "potential of fulltime", and after a year of working you must take 3 months off before coming back on board for legal reasons. V- means you aren't fulltime, but you get health and benefits and your contract continues indefinitely. And there's fulltime after that.
  • abmurray
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    All of this depends on a host of factors; one thing I run into a lot when staffing up for projects is that I, essentially, get two buckets of money: one I can spend internally (salaried/perm employees) and another I can only spend externally (contractors).

    The amount of financial overhead that comes with bringing someone on permanently is not insignificant -- in a lot of cases you're looking at the total cost being ~2x the actual salary.

    Some places use that as an excuse to go cheap, others do it as a way to keep headcount low, and so on and so forth.
  • ExcessiveZero
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    ExcessiveZero polycounter lvl 6
    abmurray wrote: »
    All of this depends on a host of factors; one thing I run into a lot when staffing up for projects is that I, essentially, get two buckets of money: one I can spend internally (salaried/perm employees) and another I can only spend externally (contractors).

    The amount of financial overhead that comes with bringing someone on permanently is not insignificant -- in a lot of cases you're looking at the total cost being ~2x the actual salary.

    Some places use that as an excuse to go cheap, others do it as a way to keep headcount low, and so on and so forth.

    But do you contract solely through agencies? there are plenty of freelancers which will work under contract with no agency involved, or do you like to use it as a vetting process or something.
  • Millenia
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    Millenia polycount sponsor
    I got a 6 month contract that turned out permanent through a recruiter working for the studio. Only experience with recruiters but more than positive :v
  • MagicSugar
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    MagicSugar polycounter lvl 10
    Not necessarily recommending this agency (cuz I don't know them) but saw this job posting where it says it's open to everybody.

    Pre made Asset Artist – The Netherlands

    http://opmjobs.com/job/pre-made-asset-artist-the-netherlands-attractive-salary-benefits-aaa-console-games/
    Applicants from all corners of the globe are encouraged to apply but must have the relevant skill set and experience as a VISA will need to be sponsored.
  • gsokol
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    I had a friend that got his first industry gig through a recruiter. Seemed to work out well for him.
  • Fingus
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    Fingus polycounter lvl 11
    I'm being laid off, but my job is nice enough to give me a smooth transition out and got me in touch with a recruiter. I will let you know how that works out.
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