Recruitment firm Eximius consolidates business operations into new brand
4 July 2014
Recruitment firm Eximius has consolidated its IT, operations and finance brands into one new brand.
Fri, 4 Jul 2014Recruitment firm Eximius has consolidated its IT, operations and finance brands into one new brand.
Previously the separate brands worked with the same client base, comprising investment banks, asset managers and hedge funds.
Nick Stevens, chief executive of Eximius, told Recruiter: “The long-term business objective for our reformed financial brand is to offer this client group specialist teams that cover all their different candidate requirements.”
The firm has stopped placing engineers into rail, aerospace and defence industries. This team now focuses on the energy sector, which made up the bulk of its work before the changes.
Eximius has also outsourced its public sector recruitment teams (covering teachers and social care workers) to Tempest Resourcing, in which it has a shareholding.
The changes, which also include a new website, have allowed the firm to emphasise its focus on the financial services, energy and legal sectors. Stevens said that the changes were part of the firm’s efforts to grow revenue from £20m to £100m by 2018.
Previously the separate brands worked with the same client base, comprising investment banks, asset managers and hedge funds.
Nick Stevens, chief executive of Eximius, told Recruiter: “The long-term business objective for our reformed financial brand is to offer this client group specialist teams that cover all their different candidate requirements.”
The firm has stopped placing engineers into rail, aerospace and defence industries. This team now focuses on the energy sector, which made up the bulk of its work before the changes.
Eximius has also outsourced its public sector recruitment teams (covering teachers and social care workers) to Tempest Resourcing, in which it has a shareholding.
The changes, which also include a new website, have allowed the firm to emphasise its focus on the financial services, energy and legal sectors. Stevens said that the changes were part of the firm’s efforts to grow revenue from £20m to £100m by 2018.
