The pressure to find the ?right? personalities to strengthen customer service and working teams has
made staffing decisions critical for organizations. Therefore, recruitment is more often outsourced
and done so on a global level. By analyzing interviews with recruitment consultants, this article explores
how consultants work in order to find the recruitment candidates with the most potential for
their clients. It discusses recruitment as a process of affective decision-making where consultants
use their ?gut feelings?, that is, their own embodied affects, to secure the optimal ?organizationperson
fit?. Different kinds of details in the candidate?s appearance and micro-movements of the
body cause ?good vibrations? or ?strange feelings? in the consultant?s affective body, which guides the
selection among the candidates. By deconstructing the concept of ?affect?, the article develops an
understanding of recruitment as a practice where the embodied histories of consultants themselves
play a key role in recruitment. The article claims that, as a result of competition in the business,
the recruitment consultant relies on stereotypical performances of the ideal worker.
Author Biographies
Taina Kinnunen, University of Eastern Finland
University Lecturer of Cultural Anthropology
Jaana Parviainen, School of Social Sciences and Humanities, University of Tampere