In the hunt for Minnesota campus leaders, executive search firms have come to wield increasing clout.
The University of Minnesota and the Minnesota State system together have paid more than $10 million in the past five years for outside help in recruiting administrators. St. Cloud State University alone spent more than $850,000 on roughly 20 searches since 2012, sometimes paying separately to select interim and permanent leaders.
Once sought out primarily to recruit top leaders, search firms now routinely help with filling lower-level positions, including community college deans, according to contracts and spending data obtained by the Star Tribune. During the U's recent presidential search, regents decried the "perverse incentive" created by search fees based on the hire's starting pay. Yet the firms chosen by the U often do just that: charge fees determined by the recruit's salary.
Higher education officials say that in a competitive market for talent, the consultants help draw seasoned candidates to key roles, including at rural campuses — leaders who will steward institutions with budgets worth billions.
"We think it's a wise investment," said Minnesota State Vice Chancellor Eric Davis. "Search firms help us secure a diverse and deep talent pool."
Some on campus have voiced concerns about cost, transparency and a sense that reliance on firms has spurred more turnover. At a southern Minnesota community college, the faculty union cried foul over six recent searches — and news that the campus president became a finalist in an Illinois search handled by the same consultants.
The Star Tribune requested search firm data from the U, Minnesota State and its 37 member institutions last fall. The U, which took nine months to provide most of its contracts, explained its many departments manage their own searches. Now, the university is setting out to fill key positions in new President Joan Gabel's cabinet — at a time when a string of high-profile search failures nationally has trained a spotlight on how schools look for top talent.
Different approaches
The firms, which often work closely with internal search committees, can place ads for the position, interview applicants to help narrow down a slate of front-runners and check references, among other services. Many promote their ability to recruit coveted "passive candidates" — successful professionals who are not on the lookout for new jobs.