yaroslav1

By Yaroslav Radinsky
CEO at RASA.pro tg – @radinskiy
The text is published with the permission of the author.
Link to original text is here.


I’ll tell you why we hired such an employee and what came out of it. About the battle with headhunters, resourceful pimps, and unconventional team-building.


How we looked for a GO-GO dancer for our IT company
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..

In the photo: Kristina Kukhtina. Photographer – Evgeny Pyankov.


My name is Yaroslav, and I am the CEO of the digital agency RASA based in Khabarovsk/Russia. We specialize in creating websites, applications, configuring CRM, and advertising promotion in the Russian Far East.

How we looked for a Go-go dancer or stunt marketing in IT industry

Recently, on a hiring platform, we posted a job opening for a GO-GO dancer for our agency.

The idea behind hiring an employee for this position was to bring fresh perspectives and approaches to our work, regularly boosting the team’s motivation. The concept is undoubtedly innovative, but we are also a company with a young and dynamic team.


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Everyone would have benefited from this idea:

For our designers and UX researchers, it would be an unconventional source of inspiration for new solutions. For developers, a wonderful assistant in tackling complex code and a means of relaxation after a challenging workday. One of the requirements for the job was an understanding of code terminology and the ability to visually interpret it.

And for the team as a whole, this person would be a friendly partner, the office mascot, and someone who makes you want to stay at your workplace longer and even invite friends to work – a dream scenario from any manager’s perspective. Moreover, the art of dance itself is an underestimated tool for work, especially in the form of contemporary dance.


How we looked for a GO-GO dancer for our IT company
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“I imagined working in IT differently.”


One of the main values of our team is caring for each other. Both programmers and all employees, in general, can get tired or even experience burnout, which inevitably affects work processes and potentially the team spirit. Therefore, relaxation and recreation are no less of a priority for us than the work itself.

Previously, RASA had unconventional specialists visit the office, such as a breathing techniques coach. As a team, we gathered in our relaxation room in the morning, turned off the lights, and practiced proper breathing in complete darkness to set the soul and body for a productive and energetic day, charged with positive energy. We also had a yoga instructor come to help unlock the team’s full potential through practices and, quite simply, strengthen team building.


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From time to time, as a team, we play poker, board games, and have a regular tradition of movie nights (usually on Friday evenings, but sometimes on Thursday or Wednesday). The team even votes on the movie they’ll watch. We have a ping pong table in the office where you can hit some balls during lunch, although this is hardly surprising to anyone. Also, every Friday at 5:30 PM, we have a meetup where the team shares experiences on productivity, work, and ways to improve their lives inside and outside the office.

In our understanding, it is crucial to see employees not just as workers but as a real team, where human needs are valued alongside their experience and skills. This requires time, organization, and money, but it makes us who we are.

And in our view, having a resident GO-GO dancer is one way to support the established corporate culture. At the beginning of the year, I provided details about what our team does outside of work and why the agency means much more to the team than just a workplace.


What keeps young talents in the Far East?
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What keeps young talents in the Far East?
The edge of the world, low salaries, and what is there to find at all—this is roughly what people from the central part of Russia think when it comes to us. Using the example of employees in a digital agency, let’s explore why skilled professionals choose to stay here and not move to larger cities.


But let’s get back to the job opening: after its publication, some time passed, and for some reason, local media and public groups started writing about it. Then, my colleagues and acquaintances noticed it. I received messages in private and via email with content along the following lines.


This is genius!


Is everything okay there?


Should I break into IT?


To be honest, I was a bit surprised by such a resonance: a regular job opening meant to address production tasks suddenly became news and quickly left Khabarovsk, making its way into larger media outlets.


How we looked for a GO-GO dancer for our IT company

Publications in local media and not only about our vacancy.


I was even invited to the radio, and Moscow-based news portals reached out for interviews to have me share more details. Well, it’s time to share them with you too.

PR campaign

Or, damn it, fake news.
I suppose you’ve already grasped that our job opening is an atypical PR campaign, which, to my delight, worked out as planned.

The idea struck me on December 14th. It didn’t happen spontaneously; I was exploring ways to advertise our agency. It’s always a significant budget and a major hassle for companies like ours. After all, we operate in the performance marketing sphere, where everything is measured in quantitative terms: we attracted so many leads, brought in so many clients, reduced the number of abandoned carts, sold 250 million worth in a month, and so on. And all agencies say the same thing: that they deliver many results for little money.


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At this point, a thought occurred to me: advertising is like buying love. Today you pay, and everyone wants you, but tomorrow the budget is gone, and you find yourself somewhere behind the scenes.

Then I remembered that besides advertising, there’s PR.
But I’m not familiar with it, and it’s not my strong suit. I’ve never been a journalist, a professional creator, or someone who knows how to create news hooks (or maybe I’m too self-critical). I always thought that the ideas that came to me were too straightforward, not very useful, and not worth trying to unfold. But that evening, I wanted to test a hypothesis that seemed quite unconventional.


How we looked for a GO-GO dancer for our IT company

News also appeared in Telegram groups.


Of course, I’m talking about the vacancy with the dancer.
I was dealing with the routine: browsing through job listings on HeadHunter and working on recruitment – currently, we’re in search of an HR manager, so I’m handling personnel matters for now. While reviewing profiles of analysts, programmers, and HR professionals, I suddenly felt the urge to see someone extraordinary, a specialist that no other company has.

And why not a dancer?

I immediately envisioned the reaction of those around to such a prank. Here’s an IT company, and they’re looking for a GO-GO specialist, and it’s definitely not about the Go programming language. Any regional media outlet would pay attention to this – and where there’s resonance in regional media, the news quickly spreads further, across the entire internet.

Many might believe that IT professionals have become so spoiled that they don’t know how to indulge themselves anymore (which, in reality, doesn’t resemble the truth anymore, but who needs this dull reality?). Plus, when there’s a component of sex and cheekiness in PR, it only amplifies its effect. The idea seemed good to me, with a budget of only 1400 rubles (the cost of posting the vacancy), and I decided to take the risk.


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How we looked for a GO-GO dancer for our IT company 66


But first, I sought advice from someone who deals with similar creative things – it was interesting to hear an opinion from an outsider’s perspective.

Testing is necessary. But, unfortunately, I didn’t come up with this.

On the other end of the line.

I took a deep breath, posted the job opening, and then sent it to a couple of acquaintances for them to check it out.

A few hours later, I saw a post about the vacancy in a regional community on social media. After that, information started coming in that the link to it was circulating in chats among employees of IT companies, various banks, 2GIS offices, and so on. My inbox quickly filled with messages from many of my colleagues and acquaintances.


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Some expressed respect for excellent PR, while others didn't quite catch on and wrote that it was a very bold job opening.

In connection with this, quite a few people wanted to join the commission for selecting the new employee.

Responses to the vacancy on HeadHunter spiked sharply. However, 80% were, of course, programmers who wrote that our company is solid, and they wished to join us in the office. Yet, among the responses, there were also very relevant ones, especially from the local community: one girl prepared a resume very well, and it was evident that it was crafted directly in line with the job requirements.


How we looked for a GO-GO dancer for our IT company
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From the resume for the position of Go-Go dancer in the IT team: “I inspire people, charge them with joy, I play the crocodile well.”


Moreover, an enterprising individual named Artem (originally from Komsomolsk-on-Amur) contacted me, proposing to regularly supply girls for a percentage. He even sent their profiles with photos and videos – the guy was geared towards establishing serious business relations. I assume he still hasn’t quite grasped the essence of our initiative.


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Of course, very few channels and media outlets explicitly mentioned the name of our agency. However, the address (Dzerzhinskogo 52) was visible in the vacancy screenshots, and the city was always specified, which contributed to the success of our PR campaign. The screenshots spread across a vast number of chats, channels, and communities, and people started googling to find out more about this company.

Without exaggeration, our website traffic increased approximately 50 times. We started receiving kind and warm letters of respect from literally everywhere, even from CIS countries. Some simply wrote “you guys are awesome,” while others said that we created the perfect festive atmosphere.


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Cover letter: “I don’t know what your plan is, but you definitely created a festive atmosphere in the office.”

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Cover letter: “Brilliant! We need to put this idea into circulation!”


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Cover letter: “With dancing code and fun!”


It wasn’t without its challenges, either.

And problems did arise with the HeadHunter website – our vacancy started getting blocked. When a significant traffic influx hit the job opening (this happened on the 19th, a Tuesday), HH algorithms likely perceived it as a DDoS attack or some bot influx, so they took the vacancy down from publication. No money was deducted in the process.

The problem was not too complicated to solve – I simply clicked the “repost” button, and the vacancy returned to its place. However, on Thursday, the vacancy was blocked again, and the HH support team contacted me – they demanded the complete removal of the job opening from the site, referring to clauses in the agreement stating the inadmissibility of content that could harm the site’s reputation.


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In other words, you can search for real striptease dancers from strip clubs on HH, but not for an IT company.

I disagreed with HH’s position: we didn’t violate any platform rules, and such a vacancy only benefited everyone in terms of traffic. So, I suggested having a call to settle this misunderstanding. Within half an hour, I received a call from technical support. Not from the PR department, not from the marketing department, but specifically from technical support, where people work strictly according to scripts. I’m not here to speak negatively about the support service, but our dialogue kept hitting the same script: they claimed that the publication could harm the project’s reputation, and I asked to connect me with the PR or marketing departments for further discussion.

When the conversation reached a complete deadlock, they told me that two complaints had been filed against our job opening.

I asked for clarification: two hundred or two thousand?
They replied: just two.


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So, at that moment, out of approximately 50,000 people who viewed the job opening, two individuals clicked the “report” button, which became one of the main reasons for the blockage. We tried to resolve this issue, but in the pre-New Year rush, with a million other things to handle, it was too cumbersome.

However, in all other aspects, our prank was a success.
The team in the office received a boost of positivity right up to the holidays, and we gained a better understanding of the power of PR.

In the end

We spent 1400 rubles for the publication on HeadHunter, and that was the entire budget.

About 20 million users saw the news about the vacancy (based on rough and superficial calculations of public reach. Unfortunately, we couldn’t count the statistics for corporate chats).

Responses to our other vacancies significantly increased – more than 200 came in. After the New Year, some of these individuals will start working with us once we find an HR manager.

Khabarovsk is once again making waves in creativity and PR – and it’s delightful. Most importantly, many truly believed in the reality of what was happening: both IT professionals, the audience, and even journalists.


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So, when people say that there is no life, creativity, or creative individuals on the Far East, it sounds at least strange to me. We saw, through a simple example, how interesting the PR tool can be, and I think we’ll implement something new in the near future (I’m not selling PR courses yet, but if anyone is interested, write to me on Telegram 🙂

P.S. While writing this article, my colleagues managed to convince me of something, and after the New Year, we will indeed invite a Go-Go dancer to the office. But I’ll write about that next year (and possibly even add a video).

Greetings from frosty Khabarovsk,
Yaroslav Radinskiy, RASA.


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Happy New Year everyone!


yaroslav1

By Yaroslav Radinsky
CEO at RASA.pro tg – @radinskiy
The text is published with the permission of the author.
Link to original text is here.

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