Audience: All consultants, team leaders, delivery staff
Applies to: Permanent, contract, temp introductions
Non-negotiable: No introduction happens without this process
1) Purpose (Why this exists)
This SOP exists to:
- protect the agency’s fees
- remove risk from individual decision-making
- ensure every introduction is legally defensible
- keep consultants focused on delivery, not disputes
Key rule:
👉 If the process isn’t followed, the introduction didn’t happen.
2) What counts as an “introduction”?
An introduction includes any of the following:
- sending a CV (branded or unbranded)
- sharing candidate details by email, ATS, portal, LinkedIn, WhatsApp, or verbally
- arranging or suggesting interviews
- referencing a candidate by name in relation to a live role
There are no exceptions (including “I know them”, “previous relationship”, “they asked for it”).
3) Pre-Introduction Checklist (Must be completed every time)
Before sending anything candidate-related, confirm:
- Client record exists in CRM
- Client contact details are correct
- Terms & Conditions are:
- already agreed OR
- being sent automatically as part of the intro
- Candidate consent is confirmed
- CV is branded with the agency template
If any box is not ticked → STOP and fix it.
4) Terms: How they must be handled (no discretion)
- A) First-ever introduction to a client
You must:
- send Terms & Conditions before or with the first candidate
- ensure the email or system log shows:
- date sent
- recipient
- attachment or link
Never:
- send a candidate “to get interest first”
- promise to “sort terms later”
- assume prior relationships override this step
- B) Existing client
- confirm terms are on file
- confirm they cover:
- the role type
- the hiring entity
- the territory (where relevant)
- if unsure → resend terms (this is safe and expected)
5) CV & Candidate Presentation Rules
Every CV sent must:
- be agency-branded
- include a footer or header disclaimer stating:
“This candidate is introduced subject to [Agency Name] Terms & Conditions.”
Where possible:
- include a hyperlink to the terms
- include your standard introduction email template
Never:
- forward an original CV without branding
- paste candidate details into an email without the disclaimer
- send via WhatsApp/LinkedIn without a logged follow-up email
6) Approved Introduction Email (Use This or Don’t Send)
Subject: Candidate Introduction – [Candidate Name] – [Role]
Body:
Hi [Client Name],
As discussed, I’m pleased to introduce [Candidate Name] for the [Role] position.
This introduction is made subject to our Terms & Conditions, which are attached / available here: [link].
Please confirm receipt and whether you’d like to proceed with interview.
Kind regards,
[Your Name]
📌 This email must be sent via CRM or logged immediately.
7) Evidence Building (Do this automatically)
You must log the following in CRM:
- date/time of introduction
- how it was sent (email, portal, etc.)
- confirmation or response from client
- interview scheduling messages
- offer discussions
- start date confirmation
Golden rule:
If it’s not logged, it didn’t happen.
8) Common “No Excuse” Scenarios (Still follow the SOP)
❌ “I knew them from my last job”
❌ “They wouldn’t have looked at the candidate if I sent terms”
❌ “They already had the CV”
❌ “It was just a quick intro”
❌ “TA reached out directly after”
✅ The process still applies.
9) What to do if something goes wrong
If you realise:
- terms weren’t sent
- CV went unbranded
- evidence is missing
Do this immediately:
- Tell your manager
- Log what did happen (honestly)
- Send a follow-up email restating:
- the introduction
- the applicable terms
- Do not try to “fix it quietly”
Early correction > expensive dispute.
10) Manager Responsibilities
Managers must:
- spot-check introductions weekly
- enforce CRM discipline
- challenge any “off-process” behaviour
- support consultants who follow the SOP (even if a deal is lost short-term)
11) Cultural Rule (Read this twice)
Protecting the business is not being difficult.
It is how we:
- get paid
- scale safely
- avoid disputes
- increase long-term earnings for everyone
If a client refuses to engage because terms are sent:
👉 that is commercial risk avoided, not a deal lost.
12) Final Line (Non-Negotiable)
No terms. No evidence. No introduction.