Most businesses need additional expertise at some point, sometimes for a short project, sometimes because a team suddenly needs more capacity and sometimes because a permanent hire simply does not make sense, which is where contract recruitment becomes useful.
Contract recruitment allows companies to bring in experienced professionals for a defined period of time, usually with a clear objective. That might be delivering a project, adding capacity or providing specialist expertise that is not needed long term. In practice, it has become less about filling gaps and more about enabling delivery.
It is particularly common in environments where timelines are tight and skills are specialised. Technology, product and transformation teams often rely on contract talent to keep delivery moving.
How contract hiring is being used now
Contract recruitment is not new, but the way companies are using it has shifted quite noticeably. At the moment, contract hiring is being driven less by short term cover and more by how organisations structure delivery overall. There is a clear shift towards using contractors as a strategic lever rather than a stopgap.
This is showing up clearly in how businesses are using contract talent:
- Access to experienced business and technical consultants who can add value from day one, particularly on transformation programmes, system implementations and change initiatives where there is no time for a long ramp up
- Greater flexibility in how teams are built. Organisations can scale delivery capacity up or down depending on project demand, without committing to permanent headcount in uncertain or fast moving environments
- Immediate access to niche skillsets and vendor specific expertise that can be difficult to hire permanently, especially in areas where demand significantly outweighs supply
- The ability to quickly plug delivery gaps, whether due to attrition, sickness, project spikes or additional support towards the end of a programme
- The ability to engage in more bespoke or specialist services at short notice, without needing to build that capability internally. This is particularly valuable for niche projects, audits or targeted transformation work
- A growing trend towards outsourced or hybrid delivery models, including building global teams or managed services that allow businesses to operate across time zones or hand over entire functions without needing to build that capability internally
- Increased use of statement of work based engagements, where organisations focus on outcomes and delivery rather than headcount, reducing the need to own all expertise in house
- A strong focus on knowledge transfer, with contractors often brought in not just to deliver but to upskill internal teams and leave a longer term capability behind
Overall, contract hiring volumes do feel higher than in previous years, but more importantly, the way contractors are being used has evolved. It is now much more aligned to delivery, flexibility and access to expertise rather than simply filling gaps and this shift is reflected in hiring data.
What the data is showing
In the UK, 53% of SMEs planned to hire contractors compared to just 21% increasing permanent headcount, highlighting a clear preference for flexible resourcing models.
At the same time, permanent hiring has remained subdued, with organisations delaying or reducing long term hires due to cost pressures and ongoing uncertainty.
Demand also continues to concentrate in project driven areas such as AI, cloud, data and cyber, where access to specialist skills is critical and timelines are often tight.
Taken together, it points to a market where contract hiring is not just active, but increasingly central to how work gets delivered.
When does contract recruitment actually make sense?
For most businesses, the decision is less about understanding contract recruitment and more about when to use it.
It tends to make sense where delivery is time sensitive, where specialist expertise is needed quickly or where the work itself does not justify a permanent hire.
It is also often the more practical option when teams need to maintain momentum without committing to long term headcount, particularly in uncertain or fast moving environments.
The question is usually quite simple - do you need a permanent hire, or do you need the right expertise at the right time?
Book a consultation
If you are reviewing how your team is structured or planning upcoming projects, or you are considering your next contract opportunity, we are here to help.
Get in touch at info@weareorbis.com to explore current opportunities or discuss how contract recruitment can support your delivery strategy.


