Media Release
Strict embargo until 8.00am Friday 3 August 2012
MedRecruit Founder Finalist for Entrepreneur Of The Year
Doctor and founder of successful medical recruitment agency, Dr Sam Hazledine, has today been announced as a finalist in
the 2012 Ernst and Young Entrepreneur Of The Year.
The awards recognise and reward the passion and drive behind entrepreneurial businesses, across all commercial and
industrial sectors and at any stage of business development.
Dr Hazledine is the managing director of MedRecruit, a medical recruitment agency he started in 2006 specialising in
working with doctors to place them in locum and permanent positions so they can have it all – career and lifestyle. Over
the past five years Sam has transformed the medical industry to give doctors back their lifestyles, and in doing so has
positively impacted the provision of healthcare throughout Australia.
“I am thrilled to be announced as a finalist in the Ernst & Young Entrepreneur Of The Year Awards. Getting this far is testament to the fact that what MedRecruit is providing for
doctors and hospitals is what they need right now - namely the ability for doctors to go further with both a life and a
career, and providing certainty and confidence for hospitals in their staffing”, Dr Hazledine says.
Dr Hazledine has grown MedRecruit very quickly and has differentiated himself from many entrepreneurs by not only coming
up with ideas but also putting together an effective team to build a successful, profitable, sustainable business.
This isn’t a first for Dr Hazledine, having been named a finalist in 2008 also. “Since becoming a finalist in 2008 I
have continued to grow MedRecruit into a significant business that is having a much wider impact and continues to grow.
I think it’s an important step for any entrepreneur, to not only be able to start a business, but to also maximise it
and ensure sustainability”, said Dr Hazledine.
Dr Hazledine says he is excited about the next stage of the competition; a ‘Dragon’s Den’ style interview with the
judging panel in Auckland in late August.
…END
Key dates for the Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year Awards:
• Category winners announcement - 27 August 2012
• Overall winner announcement - 18 October 2012
More about Dr Sam Hazledine
Thirty three year old Sam Hazledine holds himself to the highest standards in all aspects of his life. He persists until
he is successful in everything he partakes in; from graduating from Otago Medical School in 2003, to convincingly
winning the New Zealand Extreme Ski Championships by skiing the most dangerous lines and dropping a 90 foot cliff
thereby qualifying for the World Tour later that year, to starting and growing MedRecruit into a successful profitable
business at awesome speed.
Sam does not see obstacles as problems, rather as opportunities to overcome and to grow. In 2002 he sustained a
life-threatening head injury which put him in a coma for two days. Doctors said he would probably not function at a high
level again and that it was unlikely he would be able to return to medical school and he would certainly never ski
again. Sam didn’t buy into this! Within two months he was back at medical school and one year later he won the national
freeski title.
After realising his dream of winning the national extreme ski title in the winter of 2003, Sam started work as a junior
doctor. He quickly saw that the medical system was not adapting and catering for the changing lifestyle demands of the
new generation of doctors entering into medicine, and this was leading to an alarming 25% of medical graduates leaving
New Zealand within three years of graduation.
After one-and-a-half years working in the hospital system as a salaried doctor, Sam decided to go locuming. He dealt
with the big medical recruitment agencies and found their service lacking. All the agencies paid lip service to
lifestyle, but none could actually deliver it to doctors. None of them had an objective way to match doctors to work
that suited not only their careers, but also their lifestyles.
Sam saw the opportunity to help doctors achieve a lifestyle in medicine and an idea was born. But, for the idea to
succeed, Sam had to approach it in a completely novel way compared to the established, traditional, agencies. To deliver
what doctors really wanted Sam had to create a lifestyle-centric agency that had an objective way of matching doctors to
jobs that matched their lives and careers.
Sam’s idea was met with disapproval from the medical establishment who wanted junior doctors to continue to ask no
questions and do as they were told. The biggest medical recruitment agency in New Zealand actually threatened Sam,
warning him of the competitive environment he was getting into and making it clear they would do what they could to
ensure he failed.
Despite this, Sam knew what doctors needed and weren’t getting, and he wanted to deliver it to them. He also knew that
innovative marketing was needed to get his message to doctors and he was determined to make it a success.