Are you ready to thrive amidst market dynamics and challenges? Join in as we look at the strategies and insights that can help us navigate the ever-changing business landscape.
In this episode of "Push To Be More" with host Matt Edmundson chats with Steve Preston from Heat Recruitment about his experiences and strategies for thriving in a dynamic market. They discuss topics such as recharging batteries, the benefits of podcasting for entrepreneurs, and the importance of maintaining company culture.
A couple of things I got rid of were definitely the, there's certain bits
Speaker:with the phrase in the military which is sort of, you know, don't try and break
Speaker:the system, the system will break you.
Speaker:Um, and, and, or it's, you know, it's been done this way for
Speaker:years, therefore let's just...
Speaker:Repeat it.
Speaker:So sometimes if you challenge the system that could go against you,
Speaker:as opposed to in business, you want to challenge everything because
Speaker:that's how you evolve and get better.
Speaker:Um, but obviously then there's that other angle of it where the military
Speaker:knows what works and therefore is good at, um, training and repeating it.
Speaker:So the training aspect we brought into the business, so we're very key, um, and
Speaker:training heat is fundamental as well.
Speaker:Um, can't expect people to do.
Speaker:Um, a good job if they've not been trained to a decent level.
Speaker:Welcome to Push To Be More with me, your host, Matt Edmundson.
Speaker:This is a show that talks about the stuff that makes life work.
Speaker:And to help us do just that, today I am chatting with...
Speaker:Steve Preston from Heat Recruitment about where he has had to push through,
Speaker:what he does to recharge his batteries, as well as what growth looks like.
Speaker:Now, the show notes, the transcript from our conversation will be
Speaker:available on our website pushtobemore.
Speaker:com and whilst you're on the website, if you haven't done so already, make sure
Speaker:you sign up for our newsletter because each week we will email you the links and
Speaker:the notes from the show automatically.
Speaker:They just come straight to your inbox which is pretty awesome.
Speaker:Ah yes, now this episode is brought to you by Aurion Media which helps
Speaker:entrepreneurs and business leaders set up and run their own successful podcast.
Speaker:Why on earth would you want to host a podcast?
Speaker:Well, I don't know if I'm the right person to answer this question, given
Speaker:that I, in fact, host quite a few of them.
Speaker:Uh, I've found running my own podcast to be really rewarding.
Speaker:They open doors to amazing people like nothing I've seen.
Speaker:I've built networks, made friends, had a platform to champion my
Speaker:customers and my suppliers.
Speaker:And I think just about any entrepreneur or business leader
Speaker:should have a podcast, simply because it's had such a huge impact.
Speaker:on my own business and I do think it's probably one of the most underused
Speaker:but most incredible marketing things out there at the moment.
Speaker:Now of course this sounds great in theory but in reality there's a
Speaker:whole problem of setup, distribution, getting the tech right, knowing
Speaker:what the right podcast strategy is.
Speaker:The list goes On.
Speaker:The good news is, this is where Aurion Media comes in.
Speaker:You see, I love talking to people, I love conversations like the
Speaker:one I'm going to have with Steve in just a few minutes, oh yes!
Speaker:But I'm not a big fan of all that other stuff, so Aurion
Speaker:Media take it off my plate.
Speaker:They do all the production, the strategy, the graphics, etc, and
Speaker:I just get to talk to people.
Speaker:Which is a wonderful thing.
Speaker:So if you're wondering if podcasting is a good marketing strategy for your business,
Speaker:do connect with them at aurionmedia.
Speaker:com that's A U R I O N media.com so that's the show sponsor.
Speaker:Let's talk about today's guest, Steve Preston, a former, a formal
Speaker:Royal Marines commando turned CEO.
Speaker:and founder of the specialist agency Heat Recruitment.
Speaker:With a journey that spans from navigating the high pressure scenarios of the
Speaker:military to spearheading a 90 strong business recognized as one of the Sunday
Speaker:Times top 100 best companies to work for, Steve's Tale is one of resilience.
Speaker:Adaptability and a deep commitment to employee wellness.
Speaker:Steve, welcome to the show.
Speaker:Great to have you on.
Speaker:How are we doing in sunny Bristol today?
Speaker:Hi, Matt.
Speaker:Yeah, thanks.
Speaker:Yeah, all good.
Speaker:Um, yeah, we're enjoying it down here in sunny Bristol, as
Speaker:you say, uh, and for once it is sunny, and so, uh, yeah, it's a,
Speaker:Enjoy it while you can.
Speaker:Yeah, absolutely.
Speaker:Absolutely.
Speaker:Steve, listen, um, there's so much about your bio that I, that, uh, after reading
Speaker:it, I want to get into, but before we jump into that, uh, as I said, this
Speaker:show is sponsored by Aurion Media and they specialize in helping people set
Speaker:up and post and run their own podcast.
Speaker:So if you had your own podcast and you could have anybody on the show, As a
Speaker:guest to interview, both from your past or your present, the only caveat being
Speaker:that they've had to have had a big influence on your life, who would you
Speaker:have as a guest on your show and why?
Speaker:from my past and my present, um, I would say, and these are people that I, I have
Speaker:to have known, or these are people that
Speaker:Nope, they can be an author, they can, I mean, anybody, just somebody
Speaker:who's had an influence on you.
Speaker:I would say, um, there's many a sort of, an explorer that I would pick, um, you
Speaker:know Ranulph Fiennes, that, that have achieved phenomenal feats, where I think
Speaker:it's that just the, the ability to keep going in the face of adversity, I think,
Speaker:you know, that side of, um, Uh, the sort of, um, the grit and determination
Speaker:that's needed in order to climb, say, Everest or to, to go on a, a polar ex,
Speaker:uh, sort of expedition is, is phenomenal.
Speaker:Um, it's like, uh, we had, um, Alan Chambers, for instance, he's, um, an
Speaker:ex, funny enough, an ex Royal Marine, but he's, he's been to the North
Speaker:Pole more times than anyone else.
Speaker:Um, he was a guest speaker for us at Christmas.
Speaker:That story's phenomenal because you're just constantly hearing how you've
Speaker:got to keep reinventing yourself.
Speaker:You've got to, um.
Speaker:motivate when you probably don't want to be motivated.
Speaker:Um, and, and, and so those sort of things I think are, um, um,
Speaker:inspiring, um, and keep you going equally from the business world.
Speaker:There's many a successful business person that you look at and you, you, you enjoy
Speaker:the story and the journey they've been on from, um, the Richard Bransons, which
Speaker:obviously we all, we all know and know the stories there, but, but equally sort of.
Speaker:Um, so, you know, lesser sort of well known business people, I
Speaker:like to hear the stories of where they've come from and how they've,
Speaker:uh, sometimes even just by default.
Speaker:Find themselves in a successful position.
Speaker:Um, so for me, I, I'd be picking, yeah, as I say, you know, people
Speaker:that have achieved, you know, sort of extreme, um, expedition feats and
Speaker:um, um,
Speaker:um, those from the business world, which you can learn from.
Speaker:yeah, it's good choices, Ranulph Fiennes, great choice, uh, you
Speaker:know, the expedition, the explorer, it's all fascinating, isn't it?
Speaker:But I imagine, um, we read in the bio there that you're an ex Royal Marine
Speaker:Commando, so I imagine you've been to a far few places yourself, uh, and had
Speaker:to push through on a fair few things.
Speaker:I think, yeah, I mean, that's part and parcel of obviously the, The
Speaker:world of being a Royal Marine is that you've got to, um, don't tend to get
Speaker:sent to nice places, put it that way.
Speaker:So you've always got to push through and you know, there's
Speaker:always that sort of, um, um, smile in the face of adversity as such.
Speaker:And, and, and, you know, when you're wet, cold, and it's miserable, you've
Speaker:got to, Find your inner strength.
Speaker:Um, and, and that is part of the commando spirit.
Speaker:So, um, it's, it's something that you, you, I think you, you probably have it
Speaker:within you and then the Royal Marines find it for you and, and, and, and
Speaker:expand upon it and develop you further.
Speaker:yeah, that's a really interesting point and I'm, a part of me wants to ask
Speaker:the question why you joined the Royal Marines, but the other part, just to
Speaker:pick up on what you've just said there, you've probably got it within you, the
Speaker:Royal Marines probably helps you find it.
Speaker:How do they, did they do that with you?
Speaker:I mean, what was sort of some of the things that, that drew that out in you,
Speaker:that sort of that spirit of resilience?
Speaker:Well, I think, I mean, If you take the sort of, the way that you're
Speaker:trained is very much, you're broken and then you're rebuilt, so to speak.
Speaker:Um, you're pushed, you are pushed to the limits and then at that point where you
Speaker:feel you can't go any further, you're encouraged, um, but the word encouraged
Speaker:is the military way of encouraging, um, you're encouraged to go further.
Speaker:Um, And then only by doing that you realize actually you can, you know,
Speaker:you can push yourself a little bit more or you, you, you can, um, um,
Speaker:you can achieve that bit that you probably didn't think you could achieve.
Speaker:And, um, I think that's what I predominantly wanted to do is take
Speaker:the good things from the military and bring them to business.
Speaker:Um, you know, there's a lot of, you know, things that I wasn't too keen
Speaker:on, you know, there's a lot of.
Speaker:Hurry up and wait when you're in the military, but equally, um, um, taking
Speaker:the good things from the military and bringing them to business, um,
Speaker:is what I was aiming to achieve.
Speaker:mm So how did you, what was that journey then?
Speaker:Uh, uh, uh, you know, from the Marines to the corporate world?
Speaker:What was that like?
Speaker:Was that something you, you, like I, this is the date I'm leaving the Marines
Speaker:the next day I'm setting up my business?
Speaker:Or was there something a bit more nuanced in the middle?
Speaker:Um, yeah, I mean, that, that transition, I mean, I, I, you know,
Speaker:served 12 years and it's very much like, you know, you don't think you're
Speaker:employable because you, you, you think you're institutionalized in a way.
Speaker:Um, So there's probably a month that, you know, there's a good month
Speaker:where I was fretting about even thinking, will I even be employed?
Speaker:Um, you know, and you're stepping into the unknown, um, where simple tasks
Speaker:like, I didn't even know where my doctors was or even how to deal with
Speaker:that because it'd all been dealt with.
Speaker:So, you know, certain things like that you, you've got,
Speaker:you haven't got a clue about.
Speaker:Um, um, but I was, you know, I was fortunate to transition
Speaker:and went to, to Hayes actually.
Speaker:Um, and Hayes was quite sort of, uh, you know, a fairly, uh, Not, I
Speaker:wouldn't say harsh, but it was just it was in the world of recruitment.
Speaker:So it's on the stern lines, we say, you know, you're only as good as your
Speaker:last few months, as they say, you know, it's, um, so but for me transit,
Speaker:you know, doing that transition from military life to there was actually
Speaker:Relatively easy because I was enjoying it.
Speaker:It was exciting, but it was also trying to get back to, um, sort of knowing what
Speaker:you're doing in your job because obviously you're having to reteach yourself.
Speaker:So that's, that was the big curve that you go on because you're sort
Speaker:of rapidly trying to, um, learn a completely new industry, um, and, and
Speaker:in a, you know, totally new environment.
Speaker:mm,
Speaker:equally when you, you know, when you leave, you know,
Speaker:you're expecting on a, um.
Speaker:A big fanfare and pipes and, you know, everything, you know, you're expecting
Speaker:the gates to be lined with people and it pretty much is, uh, one guy just
Speaker:saying, can you hand in your ID card?
Speaker:And then, and then you're off and it, so it seems sort of, uh, there's a bit
Speaker:of an anti climax to actually just leave it in a way, because you sort of, you
Speaker:really are parking it and then, and that's, and that's you into Civvie Street
Speaker:and onto your new, your new chapter.
Speaker:But I think I'd already prepped my brain sort of.
Speaker:Say I've, I've got one, you know, that first chapter, which is that military
Speaker:bit has been, um, that book's closed and I'm, I'm opening up my next chapter and
Speaker:that's what made it exciting to sort of look at where I was going to be going.
Speaker:And I had to obviously cut my teeth to understand the world of recruitment,
Speaker:which I, I managed to do both Hayes and then Reid, and then I set up
Speaker:Heat, um, approximately sort of three years after leaving the military.
Speaker:So there's this sort of three year period then where you're learning your
Speaker:craft in recruitment and at that point you then decide I'm going to do this
Speaker:myself and you set up heat recruitment.
Speaker:Um, I'm curious what, uh, and people may have asked you all the time, uh, this
Speaker:question, Steve, but, uh, what were the principles that you learned in the Marines
Speaker:that you brought into your business?
Speaker:And what were the principles that you learned in the Marines
Speaker:that you deliberately didn't bring into your business?
Speaker:Yeah, that's, that's, that's good.
Speaker:A couple of things I got rid of were definitely the, there's certain bits
Speaker:with the phrase in the military which is sort of, you know, don't try and break
Speaker:the system, the system will break you.
Speaker:Um, and, and, or it's, you know, it's been done this way for
Speaker:years, therefore let's just...
Speaker:Repeat it.
Speaker:So sometimes if you challenge the system that could go against you,
Speaker:as opposed to in business, you want to challenge everything because
Speaker:that's how you evolve and get better.
Speaker:Um, but obviously then there's that other angle of it where the military
Speaker:knows what works and therefore is good at, um, training and repeating it.
Speaker:So the training aspect we brought into the business, so we're very key, um, and
Speaker:training heat is fundamental as well.
Speaker:Um, can't expect people to do.
Speaker:Um, a good job if they've not been trained to a decent level.
Speaker:So that's definitely there.
Speaker:Um, you know, we've got, you know, a lot of, well, our core values,
Speaker:for instance, that we still operate to now are very similar to the,
Speaker:uh, the Commando spirit, which is, you know, we're working along fun,
Speaker:excellence, um, integrity, partnerships, um, um, and enterprise as well.
Speaker:So, um, that's where we're.
Speaker:Pitching ourselves with what we work towards now as a business and
Speaker:equally those, those aspects were already within the military there.
Speaker:So we want to make sure that we're striving to be professional, you know,
Speaker:it's that sort of professional excellence and, and, and make sure you're having
Speaker:fun whilst you're there and not doing things just for the sake of doing them.
Speaker:yeah,
Speaker:That's one thing that, you know, that the military is quite good in the sense
Speaker:that, you know, if you'd managed to complete everything that was needed
Speaker:to be done, then you'd be able to hit the gym or whatever you wanted to do.
Speaker:You'd get some time in lieu, you know,
Speaker:um, so there, there's a few things that you mentioned, there Steve, that I just
Speaker:want to pick up on, um, one was for you training is key and you, you, you,
Speaker:this was something that you bought over and you keep training your staff, so is
Speaker:this an ongoing training sort of regime that you have with your team or is it?
Speaker:Okay, so I've always, you know, once you've trained, you've
Speaker:been trained kind of a thing.
Speaker:So the military might, I mean, I wasn't in the military, my brother
Speaker:was, but it seemed to be like he was always training for something and
Speaker:always being prepared for something.
Speaker:and, and that's literally what we do.
Speaker:We, you know, we, I even still call it the same as what the military, you know,
Speaker:we still call it continuation training.
Speaker:You always train, there's always something to be doing.
Speaker:Um, we have a dedicated trainer at Heat, um, and Nathan's fantastic.
Speaker:He keeps literally, Um, uh, listening to the floor, looking at what
Speaker:areas still need to be developed, whether it be a certain, um, uh,
Speaker:it might just be negotiations.
Speaker:It might be, um, um, a certain area that one individual wants,
Speaker:or it might be a collective.
Speaker:So there'll be, um, Lunch and Learns, for instance.
Speaker:That's a key thing that happens sort of generally on a, uh, it can be
Speaker:a weekly or even a monthly basis.
Speaker:Um, And, and generally ongoing, um, training.
Speaker:We train people up from, we've trained people up from the beginning where
Speaker:they've just come to the industry fresh.
Speaker:And equally, we've got people that are experienced that have come to us, but
Speaker:we then push training that ensures that people operate in the heat way so that,
Speaker:um, we can't then turn around and say somebody didn't know what they were
Speaker:doing because they've had that training.
Speaker:And that's from the top bottom as well.
Speaker:That's, you know, we, I know at the moment he's building a project
Speaker:so that all the directors will get some additional training.
Speaker:It's not, we don't sort of look at just because of where you are, it stops.
Speaker:Everyone's got to keep evolving.
Speaker:And, and, um, even if you only get one, one little element of, uh, something
Speaker:that you pick up on or you learn or you think, Oh, if I tweak that and it's going
Speaker:to make me just a little bit better at my job, then that's, that's fantastic.
Speaker:It's worked, isn't it?
Speaker:yeah, it's a really, it's a really powerful point because I know
Speaker:a lot of business leaders who will, who will mentally ascend
Speaker:to the fact they do training.
Speaker:But I don't, I don't know if that translates into deliberate
Speaker:intentional training of, um, staff, uh, on a, on an ongoing basis.
Speaker:What's, uh, what, what, what, you use the phrase lunch and learns.
Speaker:What's that?
Speaker:Um, Lunch and Learns are where we will take.
Speaker:Um, it'll be an individual that's either been asked or, or they'll volunteer,
Speaker:um, and, and it may be, um, a top biller who's just, or someone who's had a,
Speaker:a really, um, got a really good story about a bit of recruitment that they've
Speaker:just done, and what they'll do is, um, they'll, they'll, it'll be on, generally
Speaker:on a, uh, on a Teams call, Everyone else will be able to sort of sign into that.
Speaker:And then part of that, they will, they will, um, do a Q and A, but
Speaker:about how their success has come around, um, and talking basically.
Speaker:So it would be an individual from our business talking to the rest of the
Speaker:business about how they've gone about, whether it be their, it might be their
Speaker:business development, it might be how they won a certain bit of business or
Speaker:how they've, um, how they, how they found their success or, or equally how they've.
Speaker:evolved from being a trainee consultant to a principal consultant.
Speaker:So it's, it's a way for us to learn from the people that we have within
Speaker:our business so that we've got the success stories being told as well.
Speaker:Um, and equally people can learn from somebody who's actually recently
Speaker:done that so that they can say, Oh, I've just joined the business
Speaker:and I can see that, um, you know, X individuals just gone and done this.
Speaker:Well, if I do that, it's there for me to achieve as well.
Speaker:That sounds great.
Speaker:So it's not actually just somebody else coming in and teaching you.
Speaker:A lot of the learning is peer learning isn't it, you're
Speaker:learning from one another Mmm.
Speaker:yeah, that's literally what it is.
Speaker:It's a, it's a sort of a peer to peer, um, sort of Q& A and, and sort of
Speaker:discussion as well, where people get to obviously ask their questions and
Speaker:then we, we, that, that would be like this, it would be recorded and then that
Speaker:would be put onto our internal intranet so people can then watch it back.
Speaker:Um, and pick up the various points that they want.
Speaker:How has your own leadership style changed from being a Royal Marine Commando to
Speaker:heading up a company recognised by the Sunday Times, which is, congratulations
Speaker:on that by the way, that's no mean feat.
Speaker:No, I mean, we're really pleased with that.
Speaker:I mean, we managed to get on the list, actually, uh, both the, both
Speaker:the years, um, obviously building up to the shutdown of COVID, you
Speaker:know, so that was, that was good.
Speaker:Um, yeah, I mean, the leadership style is, is, yeah, very different to the
Speaker:military way because the military, you just say, you just say what you
Speaker:want to happen and it happens because, um, There's different consequences.
Speaker:Um, um, you know, you're in a very sort of.
Speaker:Um, you know, generally it's classed as orders, isn't it?
Speaker:You're delivering orders to people.
Speaker:Um, whereas in, in, in business, it's very, um, um, I suppose there's,
Speaker:there's discussions around everything.
Speaker:You've got to, you've got to get the, you know, get people's buy
Speaker:in, make sure it's aligned with the overall strategy and planning.
Speaker:I think it's, it's still, you've got to, you know, there's points where you've got
Speaker:to be assertive and there's points where a decision needs to be made, but overall
Speaker:it's generally through more of a sort of a committee style, um, and, and the various
Speaker:different level of meetings and, and with that, then the strategy, you know,
Speaker:obviously once the strategy is there, it all aligns nicely along, along with that.
Speaker:So, um, And equally as the business has grown, it's allowing, you know,
Speaker:we've got a lot, you know, we've got, you know, we employ good people.
Speaker:So it's letting good people do their job.
Speaker:Um, you know, there's no point trying to be doing, you know, I suppose in
Speaker:the early days, I was probably guilty of doing too many or wearing too
Speaker:many hats and doing too many things.
Speaker:And part of that is actually just interest and excitement.
Speaker:You want to be involved.
Speaker:You want to know what's going on and you want to.
Speaker:Um, you know, it's your business.
Speaker:So you, you, you're, you're involved, you're brought into it.
Speaker:Um, but over time, you've almost got to force yourself to step away and,
Speaker:you know, not do those things that you really want to do or you enjoy
Speaker:or want to do, but allow others to do it because that's, that's what, you
Speaker:know, that's what they're good at and that's what they're being paid to do.
Speaker:So, so let people do, And, you know, and, and get off the reins,
Speaker:so to speak, you know, um, which it's, you know, it's tough.
Speaker:I suppose it's tough for a lot of business owners that set, you know, the
Speaker:founders that set a business up is to get to almost go, now you're not wanted,
Speaker:now you're not needed in that area.
Speaker:And you're like, but I've been doing it for years, let me.
Speaker:It's almost, the trick is almost to do yourself out of a job, isn't it,
Speaker:as the business founder and owner.
Speaker:You're just like, so we, I don't want my name on any of the tasks
Speaker:or any of the projects, but you've got to work hard to get there.
Speaker:How easy did you, um, how easy did you find it switching them between,
Speaker:I mean, I guess you had this sort of three year intervening period, um.
Speaker:I'm curious, was it easy for you to switch between a sort of military style
Speaker:of leadership to the more collaborative approach that you maybe need for business?
Speaker:I would probably say I found it relatively easy, but probably in the
Speaker:early days, people would probably say, no, you didn't, um, um, you know, it's
Speaker:probably more, um, in, you know, now I've sort of, um, you evolve over time
Speaker:anyway, and you realize to sort of, whereas in the early days, I probably
Speaker:wanted, Everything done instantly.
Speaker:I was like, you know, let's, you know if a task's there, why is it not being done?
Speaker:Why is it not being dealt with straight away?
Speaker:Um, now you realize actually there's a lot of things, a lot of moving
Speaker:parts and, um, you know, things will, will, will, will, they will get to the
Speaker:point of being done and, and solved and everything else, but you just
Speaker:might have to be a bit more patient.
Speaker:yeah,
Speaker:which is one of those.
Speaker:qualities is that it's sometimes quite tough to just sit and wait, isn't it?
Speaker:And let things evolve as opposed to trying to rush them.
Speaker:So, how have you, you started the business three years after leaving the commandos,
Speaker:has it all been sort of sunshine and rainbows since then or have there been
Speaker:a few challenges where you've had to sort of find that resilience that you,
Speaker:that you learned in the Royal Marines?
Speaker:Yeah, I mean, we've, um, I think that, I mean, there's been numerous times
Speaker:throughout, you know, I mean, we've seen in the time of running a business from.
Speaker:2006.
Speaker:Um, you know, we've seen the FTSE at its highest.
Speaker:We've seen the FTSE at its lowest.
Speaker:We've been through a couple of recessions.
Speaker:We've had obviously lockdown with COVID.
Speaker:Um, so there's many a time you've got to reinvent yourself, um,
Speaker:learn on the spot, so to speak.
Speaker:Um, you know, the, the, the whole furloughing people.
Speaker:I mean, that was a, Nobody puts that into a learning manual.
Speaker:I mean, that was, I think most people were, um, just flying by the seat of
Speaker:their pants, realistically, just because nobody knew how long it was going on
Speaker:for, what was happening, and you've just got to be as adaptable as possible.
Speaker:I think that's what, um, you know, from the military, that's what gives
Speaker:you, you know, that adapt and overcome is very much always spoken about.
Speaker:Um, but from the early days, I, you know, I set the business up,
Speaker:um, in a very unorthodox way.
Speaker:In a sense, I imported a log cabin from Lithuania, which I built
Speaker:with my brother and a friend.
Speaker:Um, and then we had six people working from it, um, in the end of my garden.
Speaker:Um, so it was, um, and that was a saving
Speaker:why would you not?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And that was a saving grace because that got us through that 2008,
Speaker:2009 recession because we were, um, hankered down in a, in a log cabin.
Speaker:Um, and then we moved into, you know, sort of, um, commercial offices.
Speaker:Um, and since then we've seemed to find new office space every sort of three years
Speaker:and, and move on again and keep growing.
Speaker:Um, we opened Manchester last year and that's a success
Speaker:that's been going really well.
Speaker:Um, and then obviously our London operation is growing as well.
Speaker:So it's just being adaptable and, um, and, and yeah, I think adaptable and,
Speaker:and, and having that ability to make decisions when you need to fairly quickly.
Speaker:Um, um, but equally now I tend not to, I suppose in the early
Speaker:days I'd have made decisions.
Speaker:Probably without, um, I don't know, consulting, whereas now it makes more
Speaker:sense that we consult on pretty much most things because it just means that we get
Speaker:a better end result with the decisions, you know, I don't accept that I'm right
Speaker:at any time, you know, you always have to listen to those advisors around you.
Speaker:yeah, yeah, no, fair enough, fair enough.
Speaker:So what if, I mean, is the log cabin still there?
Speaker:I was curious.
Speaker:No, the Long Cabin's, I moved out of that house probably 10 years
Speaker:ago, so I guess it's still there.
Speaker:Yeah, we had to relocate the office before I could even move house.
Speaker:I didn't feel I could sell the house with a business.
Speaker:yeah, that'd be an interesting mortgage deed, that's for sure.
Speaker:Um, so, so what, um, how did you guys deal with COVID?
Speaker:Cause I imagine recruitment and COVID weren't necessarily a
Speaker:match made in heaven, were they?
Speaker:Or were they?
Speaker:Did you do really well into COVID?
Speaker:We, um, so when COVID came around, we just signed literally a month before COVID
Speaker:and that all, I think it was the end of March, wasn't it, when lockdown actually
Speaker:came in, um, in the March start of April.
Speaker:Um, we literally just signed a lease on a new floor space, 7, 000 square
Speaker:feet, um, accommodating about 110 staff.
Speaker:Um, and then literally the brakes came on, didn't they?
Speaker:And it was just...
Speaker:What do we do here?
Speaker:So we, um, we, we, we took a sort of a, um, chill out, shall we say,
Speaker:a condor moment, as we call it.
Speaker:You know, we just sit back and just actually just try
Speaker:and gather your thoughts.
Speaker:Um, uh, at which point, you know, we, we, we put everybody onto furlough.
Speaker:Um, there were a couple of people that we, that didn't qualify and then they
Speaker:did qualify because I think the rules changed, but basically everybody went to.
Speaker:to furlough.
Speaker:Um, um, and it was, it was really was self preservation really, wasn't it?
Speaker:It was just trying to make sure that we, we, we, we saved as many
Speaker:people's jobs as possible and that we weren't going to lose anyone.
Speaker:Um, we did a bit of restructuring, which was actually good because it allowed
Speaker:us to look at the business a bit and look at what we did and didn't need.
Speaker:So, um, we were able to do a bit of restructuring, um, gather our thoughts on
Speaker:that, which was, um, Which is where the success came, because when we came out,
Speaker:then we brought people back fairly soon, I think around about the October time,
Speaker:we brought people back in, in different waves of experience levels, so that we
Speaker:knew people could, um, start to generate business and hit the ground running
Speaker:because of their experience levels.
Speaker:As we brought sort of the more junior people back into the business, um, and
Speaker:then by the end of the year, we had everyone back in the business, um, we
Speaker:were able to, um, build a new plan, a new model around it, which, um, which is now.
Speaker:Um, really working for us as a business and we're seeing much better business
Speaker:being done, much greater success.
Speaker:Um, so it was, uh, it was a definite, I mean, I mean, gosh, to say hiccup is a
Speaker:wrong word, but it was a definite, you know, speed bump to us as a business.
Speaker:Um, but actually there were some positives that came out of it that the, the, the,
Speaker:the strategy we have now is completely different to the strategy we had.
Speaker:Going into, um, lockdown and COVID.
Speaker:Would those strategies have evolved, do you think, if it,
Speaker:if there hadn't have been COVID?
Speaker:As in, if you're in a better place now, so it was, it took COVID to get it.
Speaker:Yeah, 100%.
Speaker:I think it's, it's that sort of element of, you know, that sort of, I don't know,
Speaker:a silver lining within a bad situation, um, was actually that it allowed us
Speaker:to take stock, look at ourselves, um, and make some sort of harsh, you know,
Speaker:harsh and strong decisions, um, which I don't believe we would have done had
Speaker:that, had COVID not happened because.
Speaker:Um, because we would have carried on doing what we were doing, if
Speaker:that makes sense, you know, you carried on, um, operating as we were.
Speaker:I mean, we were just in the stage of bringing in, um, say work from
Speaker:home, um, and we were saying, right, um, senior consultants and
Speaker:above can do two or three days from home, and that's what we bring in.
Speaker:Well, Within about a month of that decision and us trialing it, we were
Speaker:going out buying 70 laptops to ensure that everyone could work from home.
Speaker:Um, so it completely threw, um, it completely threw that out the window.
Speaker:Equally, we've been trying to get clients for years to use, um, like what we are
Speaker:now, you know, different, um, you know, means, whether it be Teams or, or, um,
Speaker:FaceTime, whatever, for those initial interviews to find out if the person's,
Speaker:you know, rather than somebody taking a whole day off to go to an interview
Speaker:that's probably, 14 minutes to an hour.
Speaker:Now people can do it, um, either from their, from their smartphone or whatever.
Speaker:Um, uh, so that really did, um, move the world of recruitment on a lot quicker
Speaker:than, you know, than what it was.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, at that time moving at, whereas we, as an industry, we were trying
Speaker:to get, you know, video conferencing, um, to the forefront, but, you
Speaker:know, people were generally sort of like, Oh, I'm not an actor.
Speaker:I'm not, they don't want to be on TV or that sort of thing.
Speaker:I don't want to be on screen.
Speaker:Whereas now we're all so comfortable with it.
Speaker:We're all on,
Speaker:we've all become so used to it, haven't we?
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:so yeah, completely.
Speaker:And I think part of that was, you know, that was a way that we communicated
Speaker:through lockdown with people.
Speaker:Um, it almost forced the hand there.
Speaker:So those, that, that I think is a real positive that people have got used
Speaker:to using technology now in a way that not only just for sort of, um, for
Speaker:business meetings, for socials, but equally for, for interviewing as well.
Speaker:yeah, that's really powerful.
Speaker:How has um, how has the world of recruitment changed in a sort of a post
Speaker:Covid world, where people expect to work remotely a lot more these days?
Speaker:Yeah, I think, um, there was the whole people want to work remotely,
Speaker:but now there's a sort of, I think we're definitely seeing more of the
Speaker:hybrid where, you know, people are in the office two or three days a week.
Speaker:Um, I think, I don't think anyone truly wants to be 100% remote.
Speaker:Um, um, I mean, we, we have, we do have people in our business that
Speaker:are 100% remote, but then what we do is we have what we call heat days.
Speaker:Every quarter we get everybody together, um, and we'll, we'll, we'll do something,
Speaker:we'll do an event, um, whether it be, um, you know, lunches or going for the races
Speaker:or something, we'll do something where we get together, um, just for, um, keeping
Speaker:the culture, um, and I think that's a key thing is making sure that you don't
Speaker:lose your culture through people being remote all the time and not knowing each
Speaker:other, um, or socializing, and we are, you know, I, I believe, you know, obviously
Speaker:humans, we live in towns, we live in cities, we are social beings, aren't we?
Speaker:That's, That's otherwise why would we go to, you know, events with each other
Speaker:in the weekends or whatever, you know, um, so, um, and we're, we're seeing that
Speaker:evolving into, you know, the, the, the, it doesn't seem to be 100% one or the other.
Speaker:It's like people don't seem to be in the office all week, but equally, um, and I
Speaker:think because of that, we're seeing, I think, a better balance for people, you
Speaker:know, well being, people don't have to take a day off to, Go to the doctors or
Speaker:take a day off to get a car MOT'd or all the things that people would inherently
Speaker:take a day off to do, you can do within your flexi or within that sort of work
Speaker:from home scenario, um, even if it's just waiting for, I don't know, if you've got
Speaker:an internet upgrade at home or something, you'd have to take a day off work to
Speaker:do that, just to stay indoors for an engineer to visit, you know, now it can
Speaker:all be done around the normal world.
Speaker:Um, so I think that there's, there's good in it and the way that it's, yeah.
Speaker:I think it has evolved for people to be able to manage their lives a
Speaker:yeah, I couldn't agree more.
Speaker:It's an interesting, you use this phrase, a better balance, and I feel like...
Speaker:We sort of, it seems to be, the pendulum obviously with lockdown
Speaker:swung sort of from one, uh, sort of swung from one extreme, didn't it?
Speaker:Where everyone was in the office 60 hours a week, all the way to
Speaker:no one's in the office at all.
Speaker:The pendulum sort of seems to be sitting back in the middle now where
Speaker:we've got this sort of mix of work.
Speaker:And people used to be bothered about, I mean, I've never, I was never
Speaker:bothered about, you know, someone's late for two minutes or five minutes.
Speaker:It's in the big scheme of things, that's a really small thing.
Speaker:And now we don't even, we don't even bother about assessing it.
Speaker:It's no point because it's literally, people are...
Speaker:Taking control of themselves and they'll do a professional job.
Speaker:So if somebody starts at nine, who cares if they start at 10, who cares?
Speaker:But equally, people are putting the hours in around what suits
Speaker:them, um, to get the end results.
Speaker:So in a way, the management style has gone a little bit different to
Speaker:where before COVID, we were very much about, um, when we were all
Speaker:in the office, it was all about.
Speaker:Wellbeing and how people are and that side of things, whereas part of the
Speaker:management and not so much driven about the results, whereas now, one of the
Speaker:things is part of the management tool now is about the results, because that's
Speaker:one of the aspects that you can actually track, whereas you can't track so much
Speaker:of the other stuff nowadays, you know,
Speaker:No, totally, it's very, we seem to have got to this place, don't we,
Speaker:where we're like, this is what I need you to do, um, that's what you'll be
Speaker:judged on, however you get that done, uh, that's more down to your personal
Speaker:autonomy rather than me telling you what to do now, um, and it seems to be
Speaker:a really interesting way of working.
Speaker:Um, what do you, I mean, you've got this business, you've got this, Um,
Speaker:Steve, where you have, you have received quite a good accolade from the Times.
Speaker:Um, what is it that you do that the Times saw that thought, actually, this
Speaker:is why we're going to give you the award?
Speaker:What was, what was some of the things that made you a bit of a standout business?
Speaker:Um, part of the, the, um, success from it was, um, culture, the culture was strong.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, they, they, they always look at how the, how the culture is, um, and,
Speaker:and equally the wellbeing from it.
Speaker:Um, the way that we'd, um, you know, we have different, um, lunch gatherings where
Speaker:people, you know, they'll pick a theme of, uh, of, of, People gather with their
Speaker:different, um, uh, contributions for, for, um, say a Mexican theme or whatever.
Speaker:Equally, there'll be different bits where we have the heat
Speaker:gyms and people can use the gym.
Speaker:We've got a lot of stuff just going on around making sure that it's not just,
Speaker:um, You know, sort of, uh, work, work, work, rather than actually making sure
Speaker:that there's that fun aspect within the business, which is what, I don't want
Speaker:to come to work myself for, you know, 40 to 60 hours a week and not have
Speaker:fun, you know, you want to make sure it's enjoyable, um, and that's, that's
Speaker:part of what we were trying to bring across to the, the, the Sunday times.
Speaker:Um, I mean, you've got to be, you've got to have a success with the business.
Speaker:You've got to be, um, providing a, um, A good end client service, um,
Speaker:which is, which is what we, we're always about looking at whether it
Speaker:be how we're managing our candidates or how we're managing our clients.
Speaker:Um, it's got to be literally first class.
Speaker:Um, it's a competitive world, so you've got to make sure that you're, you
Speaker:know, running your A game all the time.
Speaker:Mm.
Speaker:Um, and it was basically having to put that across, um, and, and that
Speaker:was noticed and that shone through.
Speaker:So that was, that was how, uh, The, the awards came about
Speaker:and it's a, it's a great one.
Speaker:We're really pleased with it, really chuffed with it.
Speaker:And it's, um, you know, when you're up against some, you know, it's,
Speaker:it's when you, you see the companies you're up against and you realize
Speaker:how good they are as well, and then you realize this is actually
Speaker:something to be proud of, you know,
Speaker:yeah, yeah, no, totally, I'm really, did it make a difference to your
Speaker:business once you won the award?
Speaker:I suppose it gives you a certain kind of credibility, but did it,
Speaker:with your customers, but did it help with recruitment for your
Speaker:own business, for team retention?
Speaker:I think what it, I think when you're.
Speaker:Entering awards like this, I think what it does is because of the way that the
Speaker:questions are styled and the way that you've got to complete your entry, that
Speaker:in itself, we always found that every time you enter an award, you evolve a bit
Speaker:more as well, because it makes you look at certain areas and say, right, okay, you
Speaker:know, is our person, you know, Um, I don't know, our diversity and inclusion policy.
Speaker:Is it up to date?
Speaker:Is it correct?
Speaker:Is it as good as it can be?
Speaker:Um, and then you look at other areas and think, okay, what else can we look at?
Speaker:What, what can we do that's going to enhance us even more?
Speaker:So I find the process is, is good in itself because it's making
Speaker:you, making you assess yourself.
Speaker:Um, and then I think with the awards, I think, I don't know if it, if It solely
Speaker:attracts people, but I think it could be a difference between if somebody's got
Speaker:a choice of two companies and they're looking at one that's got some, you
Speaker:know, there's one, you know, two Sunday Times Awards, um, as opposed to one
Speaker:that hasn't, I think then that could potentially sway it there and someone
Speaker:could say, actually, do you know what, these guys must have, uh, done something
Speaker:good to get this in the first place.
Speaker:yeah, I mean the credibility it gives you is quite extraordinary, isn't it?
Speaker:It's, um, Yeah, I mean, well, like I say, again, congratulations, Steve,
Speaker:let me ask you, um, what do you do to sort of recharge your batteries?
Speaker:You've got this company, you're winning awards, um, you know, things
Speaker:are going, they're motoring, you've got a few hiccups along the way, but
Speaker:how do you, how do you stay motivated?
Speaker:How do you recharge your batteries?
Speaker:Um, I, I like, I mean, you know, I'm generally always busy myself,
Speaker:always busy, whether it be, um, You know, hitting the gym, you know,
Speaker:like try and get to the gym daily.
Speaker:So that's, that's a key one for me is just having that time just to put your
Speaker:AirPods in and just zone out for, you know, 40 minutes to an hour, just,
Speaker:just on your, you know, your own space.
Speaker:I think you, you do need your own space a little bit with that.
Speaker:Um, equally, I, you know, I do a lot, you know, a lot of football.
Speaker:Um, with my, with my lads.
Speaker:So we're always doing that all the time.
Speaker:You know, that's pretty much a daily thing nowadays.
Speaker:Um, and then when I'm, when I've actually got more downtime, it's very much.
Speaker:Obviously, you know, factoring in, um, you know, nice, you know,
Speaker:factoring in holidays, making sure you get some time to actually just,
Speaker:you know, slow down a little bit.
Speaker:hmm.
Speaker:Mm hmm.
Speaker:but even so, I find myself, even if I've got a bit of time, I start looking at,
Speaker:well, what can I do in this bit of time?
Speaker:You know, what's next?
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:ha.
Speaker:and I do, I like, I like, I like just taking part.
Speaker:I very much, um.
Speaker:You know, I want to, where possible, always say yes, you know, so if somebody's
Speaker:saying, you know, should we do this?
Speaker:I'm like, yeah, let's do it.
Speaker:It's, uh, I don't really see things as a sort of, as a chore in that sense.
Speaker:If I'm, if it's, you know, if you're, you're out having fun and enjoying life,
Speaker:it's, it doesn't, you know, that's, that's what it's really about, isn't it?
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:I only got one crack at it, so you might as well make sure you're filling
Speaker:your time up, making the most of it.
Speaker:I'm with you, absolutely, you get one, you get one shot, it's not, um,
Speaker:So for me, I
Speaker:it's not, it's not something you can repeat, that's for sure.
Speaker:Um, what does growth look like for you, Steve?
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:think in the early days, I would have said head, you know, sort
Speaker:of head count and the size, you know, to make the size of business.
Speaker:I think now what we're looking at is, um, yes, we're increasing our head count.
Speaker:Um, but what we're making sure is that we, we maintain the, the, the, um, the
Speaker:levels, the target levels are kept high.
Speaker:So that we don't, because all too often we, you know, in the past where
Speaker:we've hired in, if we've hired in say, you know, I mean, we've hired in, you
Speaker:know, sort of, I think at one batch we've hired in about 18 trainees.
Speaker:Well, then what you see is you see a big dip in regards to the average billings.
Speaker:Um, because obviously, uh, it's going to take a hit from there.
Speaker:So what we're looking at now is more, um, making sure that we're not impacting
Speaker:that overall average billing per head, as opposed to keeping that high.
Speaker:And then growing the business.
Speaker:So this is part of that sort of changing the strategic view that
Speaker:we're looking at is making sure that we are, um, really doing, you know,
Speaker:doing good business, whereas I think before we had some business that we
Speaker:were servicing and It was really see what we would call toxic in a sense.
Speaker:It's taking a lot of time.
Speaker:It's not, you know, not getting the responses that you need or in
Speaker:and therefore it's sometimes quite tough to sort of move away from
Speaker:that sort of business because you think, Oh, it's our bread and butter.
Speaker:But equally, actually, when you do, you realize that you can, um, um,
Speaker:You can evolve into, you know, better business and do, do better quality
Speaker:business, which is what we're after doing, you know, good quality business.
Speaker:And that in itself fuels the growth.
Speaker:That really does.
Speaker:that's a really powerful point, doing better quality business fuels the growth,
Speaker:it's always been the case, uh, it's, um, it's true, isn't it, and, and, and,
Speaker:that sounds, that's, I mean, that sounds great, that sounds great, so Steve, let
Speaker:me, we've got to that time of the show where I'm going to grab the question
Speaker:box, I'm going to take a stack of random questions out of said question box, I'm
Speaker:going to flick through them, you're going to tell me when to stop, wherever we
Speaker:stop, that's the question that we answer,
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Stop now.
Speaker:okay.
Speaker:So, oh, I've dropped them on my desk, hang on.
Speaker:Pick it up.
Speaker:When did you last cry with pain or sadness?
Speaker:Wow.
Speaker:Um, I mean, my standard answer would be being a.
Speaker:Uh, a raw marine, they, they extract your tears.
Speaker:Um, so, so
Speaker:I joined the Royal Marines, yeah, that's the answer.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:That's the first thing they do.
Speaker:Extract all emotion.
Speaker:Um, um, I, yeah, I mean, the obvious things are, you know, I lost a few, you
Speaker:know, losing a few people in your life.
Speaker:That's, that's a key one, isn't it?
Speaker:Um, um, in the sense of, so that would've been on 2019.
Speaker:That was a very bad year for me.
Speaker:Lost three, three close people there.
Speaker:So, Um, that would be a time that I'd, I'd take as a, you know, a bad year.
Speaker:Mm
Speaker:um, and then, you know, they're, they're the times that you have to fight back
Speaker:and you have to get more resilient and then you bounce back from those bits.
Speaker:Um, and I think, um, inevitably it makes you stronger.
Speaker:You know, and, and I suppose years, you know, so if I went years and years back, I
Speaker:would have probably, the younger me would have thought, oh, crying was a weakness,
Speaker:you know, whereas now I see it as a bit of a strength and a, and a, a release of.
Speaker:Um, you know, tensions that are built up in you anyway, so I don't, I wouldn't
Speaker:see it as a, as a, as a bad thing anymore anyway, I, I see it as a good
Speaker:thing, I see it as a good release.
Speaker:mm Yeah, I'm with you.
Speaker:I was definitely brought up in an era where crying was definitely
Speaker:not something that men did.
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:and, um, until someone pointed out to me that the shortest verse in
Speaker:the Bible, do you know what it is?
Speaker:no, fire away,
Speaker:Jesus wept.
Speaker:Um, and so, uh, it's in John's gospel somewhere, I think.
Speaker:Um, but yeah, so it was one of those things where they were like,
Speaker:well, if, if the son of God can cry, then, then it's okay for men to cry.
Speaker:And you're like, well, okay, fair enough.
Speaker:Um, but it was very much of an era where, like you, where men don't cry.
Speaker:And so, um, I, but I agree, actually, it's quite an important thing to do.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:yeah,
Speaker:Quite important, like you say, sense of release, um, and I think it's, go on,
Speaker:no, no, no, after you,
Speaker:I was gonna say I think it's something you, that probably men of a certain age
Speaker:have had to re learn how to do, mmm.
Speaker:yes, yeah, yeah, yeah, I think so, I think it's just, and by other
Speaker:people accepting it makes it easier for everyone then, in that way, um.
Speaker:Equally, we're an Arsenal household, so we've had to cry quite a bit this year.
Speaker:Oh wow, and so for anybody outside of the UK, Arsenal were this close to
Speaker:winning the Premier League title, and it all went Pete Tong on the last, on
Speaker:We nearly had our tickets booked, but no.
Speaker:let me tell you Steve, I was, I'm a die hard Liverpool fan and um, I
Speaker:was rooting for Arsenal this season.
Speaker:When we, when I realised there's no way Liverpool was going to do anything but
Speaker:um, I was like come on, a good friend of mine who's an Arsenal fan, we're
Speaker:like come on Arsenal and then we were just like oh, I felt your pain man,
Speaker:just capitulated at the end slightly.
Speaker:yeah, exactly.
Speaker:Yeah, it was a definite landslide towards the end of the season.
Speaker:It was.
Speaker:You needed some more of that Royal Commando spirit.
Speaker:Maybe they should employ you next time to help them with
Speaker:that, uh, with that mindset.
Speaker:Listen, Steve, it's been great talking to you, man.
Speaker:And, um, really appreciated the conversation.
Speaker:If people want to connect with you, if they want to find out more about heat
Speaker:recruitment, got some questions for you, what's the best way to do that?
Speaker:I'd probably say either just, um, connect on LinkedIn.
Speaker:That's a good way.
Speaker:Um, obviously, uh, or drop me an email, steve@heatuk.Com.
Speaker:Fantastic, fantastic.
Speaker:We will of course link to Steve's both email and LinkedIn in the show
Speaker:notes, which you can get along for free with a transcript at pushtobemore.
Speaker:com.
Speaker:Or if you sign up to the newsletter, that will be coming straight to your inbox.
Speaker:Uh, Steve, listen, appreciate you being on the show.
Speaker:Thank you for joining us.
Speaker:Uh, but I've, I always enjoy talking to people who have come out of the military.
Speaker:There's just something about you guys, which is.
Speaker:Which is just awe inspiring.
Speaker:So one, thank you for your service and two, thanks for coming on the show.
Speaker:It's been an absolute pleasure.
Speaker:Thank you, Matt.
Speaker:Thank you.
Speaker:What a great conversation.
Speaker:Huge thanks again to Steve for joining me today.
Speaker:Also, a big shout out to today's show sponsor, Aurion Media.
Speaker:If you are wondering if podcasting is a good marketing strategy for your
Speaker:business, and I think it probably is, do connect with them at aurionmedia.
Speaker:com.
Speaker:That's A U R I O N M E D I A.
Speaker:com.
Speaker:Be sure to follow, push to be more wherever you get your podcasts
Speaker:from, because we've got some more great conversations lined up.
Speaker:And I don't want you to miss any of them.
Speaker:And in case no one has told you yet today, you are awesome.
Speaker:Yes, you are.
Speaker:Created awesome.
Speaker:It's just a burden you have to bear.
Speaker:Steve has to bear it.
Speaker:I have to bear it and you've got to bear it too.
Speaker:Push to be more is produced by Aurion Media.
Speaker:You can find our entire archive of episodes.
Speaker:on your favourite podcast app.
Speaker:The team that makes this show possible is Sadaf Beynon, Estella
Speaker:Robin and Tanya Hutsuliak.
Speaker:Our theme music is by Josh Edmundson.
Speaker:And as I mentioned, the show notes and transcripts are available on the
Speaker:website for free at pushtobemore.
Speaker:com.
Speaker:That's it from me.
Speaker:That's it from Steve.
Speaker:Thank you so much for joining us.
Speaker:Have a fantastic week wherever you are in the world.
Speaker:I'll see you next time.
Speaker:Bye for now.