Great recruiter. Great bloke. Great shame.
Duncan Cunningham died nine years ago this month
An excellent recruiter, a great bloke and a loyal friend.
As we bemoan our fate during COVID I can’t help but remember this kind, generous man who left his family before he reached the age of 40, and no doubt would have tackled this time with the same fortitude and good humour he displayed in all else.
We have our challenges but at least we are here to tackle them. Let us be grateful for that.
In Duncan’s memory, I am proud to re-publish the memorial I wrote a few weeks after his passing.
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A few weeks ago we received the tragic news that a good friend and long time colleague, had suddenly passed away, in shocking and totally unexpected circumstances.
Duncan Cunningham, who I worked with for almost 10 years, not yet even 40 years old, and with a young family, was suddenly gone.
In Australia, one of our most famous folk ‘pub’ songs is called “I’d love to have a beer with Duncan” by Slim Dusty, and I post it here as a mini-memorial to a great bloke, with whom I shared countless drinks, although to be honest his favoured tipple was the finest Scotch.
Duncan had many qualities as a man and as a recruiter, but two of his traits stood out above all for me, and I share them with you here, in honour of him, but also as a guide for us all.
One of Duncan’s most endearing characteristics, which all of us, especially in recruitment, need in spades, was that he was an optimist. Duncan ALWAYS believed good things would happen. Every year he would put in an outrageously optimistic budget and every year I would pare it back after a long debate where he would argue, beg and finally bet me that his numbers were achievable.
When he had made a success of opening our Hong Kong office, and I asked him to focus on China, his first business plan was for offices in 30 cities across that massive country.
He was always coming up with extraordinary plans for us to expand, diversify and ‘make a fortune’. Sure, some of them were fanciful, but lots were not and many of them came off. We did open in China, in fact three offices under his leadership. His audacious outsourced creative service offering, worked well, notably with one major client where we billed upwards of $1M in 2 years as a result of his pitch to the client.
Yes, Duncan always believed “it would happen”, and as a result, it often did!
The other hallmark of Duncan the man and the recruiter, was a characteristic I value just about highest of all.
He was a loyal man.
To his family of course, but also to his staff and his colleagues. He was loyal to his employer and to me personally and I will never forget it. As a high profile, high achiever in the Greater China recruitment market, he was constantly headhunted. He not only rejected the loot and stayed, but he never dreamed of using those approaches to leverage his position with me.
His big dreams could sometimes frustrate me and we had our tense moments, but he never bore a grudge, always bounced back, often with a chuckle and wry “that’s pretty harsh Mr. Savage, but probably fair”.
(And for 10 years he called me Mr. Savage, not sarcastically, and not in deference either, but it was just his way of showing respect and familiarity at the same time).
He was loyal to his clients and he looked after his staff, who he believed in and defended, sometimes frankly, when they no longer deserved it.
I will miss him, as will we all. And I really would like to have a beer with Duncan if only to be inspired by his optimism and to thank him for his friendship and loyalty.
Farewell Duncan Cunningham.
You are not forgotten.
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- Posted by Greg Savage
- On July 2, 2020
- 6 Comments
6 Comments