Amplifying Recruitment - Learn, Grow, Lead

Jamie Burrows

The podcast dedicated to supporting ambitious recruitment business owners like you. Our mission is to tackle the most pressing challenges in the recruitment industry and provide actionable insights to help you elevate your business to new heights.

  1. How Recruitment Businesses Can Win Through Content with Will Colthup

    3D AGO

    How Recruitment Businesses Can Win Through Content with Will Colthup

    Most recruitment business owners know they should be creating content. Very few actually do it and even fewer stick with it long enough to see results. In this episode, Jamie sits down with Will Colthup, videographer and content consultant who works almost exclusively with recruitment businesses, to cut through the noise on what it actually takes to build a content presence that wins you clients. Will breaks down the four real barriers that hold recruitment leaders back time, creativity, production skills, and fear of the camera and explains why the first three are largely excuses. The real issue is mindset: content is a long-term investment, and in an industry wired for instant gratification, that's a genuinely hard sell. The conversation gets into the practical detail of where to start. Will's view is that most recruiters are already sitting on a goldmine of content candidate stories, client wins, sector commentary they just haven't been shown how to extract and frame it. You don't need to be the industry expert. You can be the aggregator, the commentator, the person who shows up every Friday and tells their network what's happening. That consistency is what builds trust at scale. They also get into the "three circles" framework, message, delivery, production quality and why skipping straight to expensive kit before you've nailed your message is one of the most common mistakes Will sees. Start scrappy. Get your message right. Then level up the production. Later in the episode, they discuss the growing trend of founders hiring dedicated content creators or personal brand managers, why a marketing hire who only produces bottom-of-funnel PDFs is a wasted resource, and the uncomfortable truth about measuring ROI on content spoiler: you probably can't, and that's okay. Key takeaways: Consistency beats virality you need to be famous among 300–500 people, not 300,000 Your recruiters' daily stories are ready-made content. Stop overthinking it. Content is a 1–2 year investment. If you need quick wins, Google Ads might be the better fit right now The "Trojan horse" effect: the best recruitment content brands make people forget you're a recruiter until you need them to remember Start on your phone. Get the message right first. Production quality comes later.

    28 min
  2. Learnings From Building an 80 Head Recruitment Business with John Gaughan

    MAR 3

    Learnings From Building an 80 Head Recruitment Business with John Gaughan

    John Gaughan built Finlay James into an 80-person recruitment business with offices in Manchester, London, Chicago and San Francisco. Then he had to close it. In this episode, Jamie Burrows sits down with John to hear the full, unfiltered story of what went wrong and more importantly, what he's learned from it. John doesn't dodge any of it. He walks through how the business went from billing half a million a month to losing between £125k and £150k a month for eighteen months straight. He talks about the decision not to make mass redundancies, the moment LinkedIn shut off all 66 recruiter licenses, and why having £1.5 million in the bank still wasn't enough when the market turned and the bank refused to help. What makes this conversation valuable isn't the failure story it's what John's doing with it. He now advises fourteen recruitment companies, from solos to twenty-five-person firms, and he's seeing the same blind spots everywhere. Owners who don't know their average order value. Consultants who are exhausted from six hours a day loading cadences but haven't pulled a job in six months. Businesses setting entry-level hires up as 360 billers with no support, no structure and targets that haven't moved in fifteen years despite costs doubling. John breaks down his approach to the fundamentals three numbers he wants on day one: average order value, jobs-on-to-deal ratio, and first interviews to deal. He explains why he'd rather someone worked eight hours and spent fifteen minutes understanding what they achieved than ground through twelve hours of undirected activity. He makes a sharp case for moving up the food chain, sharing how one client is shifting their average fee from £10k to £17.5k by targeting roles two or three levels higher and the data shows they're actually more efficient at that level. There's a brilliant thread running through this episode about the gap between activity and intention. John's argument is that recruitment has become full of busy people doing stuff, and the businesses that are winning are the ones that have stripped it back to specific inputs, specific outputs and a clear destination. He's blunt about the over-reliance on tech, the death of phone culture, and why human-to-human interaction isn't just a nice-to-have anymore it's becoming the only competitive advantage left. If you run a recruitment business and you've been telling yourself you just need to do more of everything, this episode will challenge that thinking. Follow Amplifying Recruitment wherever you get your podcasts.

    53 min
  3. Why Your Recruitment Marketing Isn't Working (And How to Fix the Sales Disconnect)

    FEB 17

    Why Your Recruitment Marketing Isn't Working (And How to Fix the Sales Disconnect)

    Most recruitment companies have a marketing problem. But it's not the one they think it is. It's not that the content isn't good enough. It's not that they're on the wrong platform. It's that marketing and sales are operating as two completely separate functions and nobody's bridging the gap. In this episode, Jamie Burrows sits down with Sam Rasdall, founder of Potent, to unpack why marketing in recruitment fails when it's disconnected from BD, and what happens when you actually embed the two together. Sam's been on both sides of the fence, he started in recruitment at S3, built an academy that helped win Team of the Year, then moved into sales and brand at Bold where he took the business to a million pounds in revenue before stepping into the MD seat. Now he works with recruitment companies as a fractional marketing and sales strategist, and he's seen the same problem almost everywhere he goes. Sam breaks down a 90-day marketing-to-BD framework that turns a single industry report into four or five meaningful touchpoints with decision-makers, without a single recruiter needing to cold pitch. He explains why the marketing asset itself is actually the least important part of the whole process, and why the real ROI lives in the conversations it creates before and after it goes to market. He's blunt about the fact that most recruitment companies hire a mid-level marketer on thirty-odd grand, expect them to be a one-person department with CMO-level strategy, and then wonder why nothing moves the needle. There's a sharp segment where Jamie puts Sam on the spot with three budget scenarios a solo recruiter with three hundred quid a month, a ten-person firm with two grand, and a twenty-person business with a marketing apprentice and three grand to spend. Sam walks through each one with practical, specific recommendations from email infrastructure and sub-domains to outsourced execution, to when it actually makes sense to bring in a fractional CMO with an exit plan built in from day one. They also get into why evidence-based content beats thought leadership every time, why your consultants' call transcripts are the most underused content goldmine in your business, and why the next twelve months might be the era of the savvy SME, the recruitment firms that blend smart marketing with old-school BD and actually meet people face to face. If you run a recruitment business and you've ever felt like your marketing spend isn't translating into revenue, this one will reframe how you think about the whole function. Follow Amplifying Recruitment wherever you get your podcasts.

    57 min
  4. New Umbrella Rules Are Changing Everything with Sean White

    FEB 3

    New Umbrella Rules Are Changing Everything with Sean White

    Most recruiters don’t wake up worrying about umbrella legislation. They’re thinking about placements, clients, and keeping the desk moving. But a major change coming in April could quietly put recruitment businesses on the hook for millions in unpaid tax if they get one decision wrong. In this episode, I’m joined by Sean White, Managing Director at Omnia Outsourcing. Sean started his career in industrial recruitment before moving into payroll, so he’s seen this from both sides of the fence. He breaks down one of the biggest legislative shifts the recruitment sector has faced in years and explains why burying your head in the sand is no longer an option. We talk through what’s actually changing, why HMRC is pushing joint and several liability down the supply chain, and what that really means for agency owners. Sean explains how non-compliant umbrella companies have historically disappeared when things go wrong, leaving contractors exposed and agencies thinking they were safe, until now. You’ll hear why accreditations alone aren’t enough, what good looks like when it comes to payroll reporting, and the simple checks recruiters should be making right now. We also get into the uncomfortable reality of what happens if you get this wrong, from eye-watering tax bills to reputational damage that can wipe out years of work. Beyond the risk, we explore the opportunity. Sean shares why this legislation creates a short window for recruiters to have smarter, more consultative conversations with clients and procurement teams. Done right, compliance can become a point of difference, not just another headache. We wrap up with Sean’s view on what 2026 holds for recruitment. A year shaped by legislation, tough decisions, and a real gap opening up between businesses that take this seriously and those that don’t. If you run a recruitment business, this is an episode you can’t afford to skip. Subscribe to Amplifying Recruitment for more straight-talk conversations with people shaping the industry. New episodes every week.

    36 min
  5. JAN 20

    Recruiters Are Addicted to Cheap Dopamine with Mat West

    Most recruitment leaders are telling their teams to “get back to basics”. The problem is, half the team has no idea what the basics even are anymore. The market has changed. The tools have changed. Attention spans have changed. And quietly, motivation has taken a hit. In this episode of Amplifying Recruitment, we get into why modern recruiters are struggling to do the hard work that actually drives results, and what leaders need to change if they want performance back. Jamie sits down with Mat West, founder and CEO of ewi, a global recruitment business operating across multiple continents. Mat started in recruitment over 20 years ago, built desks from scratch in 25 countries, and later took the leap to build his own business backed by investors. He’s led teams through hypergrowth, cash-flow scares, global expansion, and cultural scale without losing the human edge. The conversation covers what really happens after you leave a big corporate and put everything on the line. Running out of cash six months in. Personally taking loans to make payroll. Learning the hard way that profit on paper means nothing without money in the bank. From there, it moves into something most recruitment podcasts never talk about. Dopamine. Mat breaks down why cheap dopamine hits from emails, LinkedIn notifications, and quick wins are killing recruiter drive. He explains why real motivation comes from doing hard things consistently, and how he’s reintroduced structured phone-based “human hours” into the business to rebuild confidence, energy, and momentum. You’ll hear why telling recruiters to “go back to basics” doesn’t work anymore, how leaders need to redefine what good actually looks like today, and why AI should be freeing recruiters to build deeper relationships, not replacing the most valuable parts of the job. It’s a grounded, honest conversation about leadership, behaviour, discipline, and what the next version of recruitment really needs to look like. If you lead a recruitment team, or you’re a recruiter feeling stuck, this episode will hit close to home. Subscribe to Amplifying Recruitment for more real conversations with leaders building recruitment businesses in the modern market. Follow the show so you don’t miss the next one. We’ve distilled our most impactful Business Development Training into one focused, fast-paced day so you can unlock client-winning strategies without sacrificing your schedule ✅ Proven New Business Development Frameworks ✅ Plug & Play Client Engagement Funnels ✅ Prospect Conversion Skills You Can Apply Immediately ✅ Live Follow-up Q&A for implementation support ⁠⁠Click here for all the info.⁠⁠

    47 min
  6. The Real Cost of Scaling Too Fast in Recruitment with Paul Micallef

    JAN 6

    The Real Cost of Scaling Too Fast in Recruitment with Paul Micallef

    Most recruiters talk about growth. Very few talk about what happens when it all collapses. This episode is a raw look at what it actually takes to rebuild after losing everything. Not a pivot story. Not a highlight reel. A real one. Jamie sits down with Paul Micallef, founder of Pegasus Search & Selection, to unpack his journey from starting his first recruitment business at 24, scaling fast in a booming market, and then watching it fall apart during the 2008 financial crash. No cash buffer. No warning. Personal loss on top of professional failure. Paul shares what that period taught him about cash flow, ego, overexpansion, and why he now runs Pegasus very differently. Leaner. More human. Still ambitious. The conversation moves into how Paul rebuilt from scratch, why he stayed hands-on as a biller, and how personal branding on LinkedIn became one of his most reliable growth levers. Two years of daily posting. No shortcuts. No instant wins. Just consistency and value. They also dive into podcasting as a business development tool, why most recruiters get content wrong, and why serving your market beats selling to it every time. If you’re a recruitment founder thinking about scale, struggling with visibility, or quietly worried about what happens if the market turns, this episode will hit home. Follow or subscribe to Amplifying Recruitment for more honest conversations with recruitment leaders who’ve actually been through it.

    41 min

About

The podcast dedicated to supporting ambitious recruitment business owners like you. Our mission is to tackle the most pressing challenges in the recruitment industry and provide actionable insights to help you elevate your business to new heights.

You Might Also Like