Recruit (company) (original) (raw)

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Japanese human resources company

Recruit Holdings Co., Ltd.

Headquarters at GranTokyo in Marunouchi, Chiyoda, Tokyo
Formerly University Advertising Co., Ltd. (1960-1963)Japan Recruit Center Co., Ltd. (1963-1984)Recruit Co., Ltd. (1984-2012)
Company type Public (K.K.)
Traded as TYO: 6098
Industry Published media
Founded 1960; 64 years ago (1960)[1]
Headquarters Tokyo, Japan
Key people Hisayuki Idekoba, President, CEO and Representative Board Director
Revenue Increase ¥3,416.4 billion (FY 2023)[2]
Operating income Increase ¥402.5 billion (FY 2023)[2]
Number of employees 128 (holding company)58,493 (group) (as of March 31, 2023)[2]
Subsidiaries Indeed Glassdoor Recruit Co., Ltd. Recruit Staffing RGF Staffing B.V.
Website recruit-holdings.com/en/

Recruit Higashi Shinbashi building

Recruit Holdings Co., Ltd. (株式会社リクルートホールディングス, Kabushikigaisha Rikurūto Hōrudingusu), also known as RGF (an acronym for Recruit Global Family) outside Japan,[3] is a human resources holding company headquartered in Tokyo, Japan. The company was founded by Hiromasa Ezoe (江副浩正), then an educational psychology student at the University of Tokyo, as Daigaku Shimbun Koukokusha (大学新聞広告社, University Newspaper Advertisement Company) in 1960. It was a spin-off from the Todai Shimbun (the University of Tokyo's main student newspaper).[1][4]

In FY 2021, it reported sales of 2,872 billion Yen and revenue of 297 billion Yen, with 55.5% of its sales generated overseas.[5] Its flagship world-wide services include the job search engine Indeed and the employer review site Glassdoor. The company is listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange and is a component of the Nikkei 225 and TOPIX Core 30 indices.[6][7] As of March 2024, the company has the 13th largest market capitalisation in the country of 11.4 trillion Yen.[8]

Founded by Hiromasa Ezoe, Recruit Holdings Co., Ltd. primarily offers staffing, promotional media, human resource media, and IT solutions. In recent years, the company has significantly focused on IT-driven business sectors.[9] It holds business competitions within the company that all employees can participate in, fostering a corporate culture that encourages freely initiating new ventures. Popular terms such as "freeter (フリーター, freelancing part-timers)", "employment ice age (就職氷河期)", and "gaten-kei (ガテン系, meaning blue-collar jobs)" have originated from information magazines it has published.[10]

Following the Recruit scandal in 1988, which was regarded as one of the largest post-war scandals in Japan, the company faced a loss of credibility, adversity worsened further by the burst of the bubble economy. This led to the manifestation of bad assets issues with subsidiaries such as Recruit Cosmos (real estate) and First Finance (financial services). The entire group found itself in a difficult situation. In June 1992, its shares were transferred to the major supermarket chain Daiei, placing it under the Daiei Group. However, due to deteriorating performance within the Daiei Group, Recruit Holdings separated around the year 2000.[11] At the time when it joined the Daiei Group, Daiei adopted a stance of being a "silent shareholder" without assuming any debts. Consequently, under Kunio Takagi from Daiei, Recruit managed to settle approximately 1.4 trillion yen in interest-bearing debt from the bubble era's real estate and non-bank business failures by the fiscal year ending in March 1994 by itself. Currently, Recruit operates independently of any corporate group, maintaining neutrality in the service industry while expanding its business operations.[11]

  1. ^ a b "History | About | Recruit Holdings". Retrieved January 4, 2022.
  2. ^ a b c "Company Profile".
  3. ^ "グローバルブランドRGFについて | 株式会社リクルート". (c) Recruit Co., Ltd. (in Japanese). Retrieved 2023-09-24.
  4. ^ "リクルートが生まれた場所、東京大学新聞 リクルート創業者 江副浩正氏の「唯一の上司」 - 東大新聞オンライン". www.todaishimbun.org (in Japanese). 2014-11-06. Retrieved 2024-03-24.
  5. ^ 茂久, 村上 (2022-06-30). "リクルート、わずか10年で海外売上比率3.6%から55.5%へ。次々に成長事業を生む実力に「死角」はあるか". BUSINESS INSIDER JAPAN (in Japanese). Retrieved 2024-03-24.
  6. ^ "構成銘柄一覧 - 日経平均プロフィル". indexes.nikkei.co.jp. Retrieved 2024-03-24.
  7. ^ 「TOPIXニューインデックスシリーズ」の定期選定結果及び構成銘柄一覧 jpx.co.jp 2020年10月7日公表 2021年10月8日閲覧。
  8. ^ "日本株 日本企業時価総額上位ランキング - 日本経済新聞". 日本経済新聞 電子版. Retrieved 2024-03-24.
  9. ^ “リクルートの深謀 比類なきIT企業を目指す”. 日経クロステック. 2015年1月22日閲覧。
  10. ^ 末永雄大 (2023年9月8日). “リクルート出身の有名人・起業家・社長まとめ!卒業後のキャリアは?”. すべらない転職. アクシス株式会社. 2024年3月14日閲覧。
  11. ^ a b 馬場マコト; 土屋洋『江副浩正』日経BP、2017年12月。ISBN 978-4822258689。
  12. ^ "Staffmark Acquired by Japan's Recruit Co. for $295 million". 19 October 2011.
  13. ^ "Indeed Announces Acquisition by Recruit Co. Ltd".
  14. ^ "Recruit Goes Public: What Next for the Staffing and Media Conglomerate?". nippon.com. 2014-11-26. Retrieved 2023-04-13.
  15. ^ O'Hear, Steve (2015-05-05). "Recruit Acquires Majority Stake In European Hair And Beauty Marketplace Wahanda For $171M". TechCrunch. Retrieved 2023-04-13.
  16. ^ "Japan's Recruit Buys European Restaurant Booking Service Quandoo For $219M". 5 March 2015.
  17. ^ Lunden, Ingrid (2016-07-01). "Indeed owner Recruit Holdings confirms acquisition of Simply Hired". TechCrunch. Retrieved 2023-04-13.
  18. ^ "Indeed to acquire Canadian jobs website Workopolis: Recruit Holdings".
  19. ^ Musil, Steven (May 8, 2018). "Glassdoor to be acquired for $1.2B by Japanese HR company". CNET. Retrieved May 8, 2018.
  20. ^ "Companies house filings".