Why more businesses are rethinking how they structure hiring decisions
Most hiring conversations still come back to speed. How quickly can we hire, how fast can we move and how soon can someone start.
On the surface, that makes sense. Delivery timelines are tight, teams are stretched and projects do not slow down to accommodate hiring processes.
But in the current market, speed is starting to create more problems than it solves.
In theory, moving quickly feels like the right approach. In practice, it often leads to decisions being made before there is real clarity on what the business actually needs.
Roles get rushed. Requirements are not fully defined. Hiring processes move forward based on urgency rather than accuracy.
That tends to show up later.
Misaligned hires, teams having to rehire within months or projects losing momentum because the initial problem was never properly solved. According to multiple hiring reports, poor hiring decisions can cost up to 30% of an employee’s annual salary, but the impact on delivery and team performance is often far greater.
It is rarely a hiring issue in isolation, it is usually a clarity issue.
That pressure is still there. Most teams do not have the luxury of slowing things down.
Transformation programmes are ongoing. Product roadmaps continue to move. Internal teams are already operating at capacity.
At the same time, hiring processes are becoming longer. In many cases, time to hire has increased over the past two years as businesses introduce more stakeholders, tighter approval processes and greater scrutiny on headcount.
So hiring still needs to happen.
The difference is how that hiring is approached. There is a clear distinction between moving quickly with a defined plan and moving quickly because there is pressure to act. Only one of those tends to lead to the right outcome.
This is where we are seeing a noticeable shift.
Rather than rushing permanent hires, more organisations are using contract talent to stabilise delivery first. Bringing in experienced professionals who can step in quickly, understand the problem and start contributing without a long ramp up.
This is not just anecdotal.
In the UK, 53% of SMEs planned to hire contractors compared to just 21% increasing permanent headcount, highlighting a clear move towards more flexible resourcing models.
Bringing in contract talent creates space. Space to properly define the role. Space to understand what the team actually needs and space to make a more considered long term decision and, in many cases, that leads to better hiring outcomes overall.
The businesses navigating this well are not slowing down hiring altogether. They are just structuring it differently.
Using contract hiring to maintain momentum. Using it to test where capability is really needed. Using it to reduce the risk of making the wrong long term hire too early.
This is particularly relevant in project-driven areas. Demand continues to concentrate around AI, cloud, data and cyber, all areas where timelines are tight and access to specialist skills is critical.
It is a more controlled approach. And in a market where priorities can shift quickly, that control is often more valuable than speed.
For most teams, the question is no longer how quickly can we hire, it is whether the hiring approach actually reflects the problem they are trying to solve.
Do you need a permanent hire right now, or do you need the right expertise at the right time?
If you are under pressure to hire quickly or trying to balance immediate delivery with longer term hiring decisions, we are always happy to share what we are seeing across the market.