Hiring Isn’t Slow — It’s Afraid
When Everyone Owns the Hire, No One Owns the Hire
If you’ve noticed hiring timelines stretching well beyond historical norms, you’re not imagining it. Across the professional and managerial recruiting landscape, decision cycles are routinely extending by 30–50% or more compared to pre-2023 benchmarks. What once was a 4–6 week process now often unfolds over 8–12 weeks — sometimes longer. Multiple interview rounds, expanded stakeholder involvement, and heightened risk aversion from both clients and candidates are now standard, not exceptional.
So what’s really behind this drag on hiring velocity?
- The Uncertainty Premium
When the future feels hard to predict — whether due to macroeconomic shifts, industry disruption, or internal organizational change — hiring becomes a transactional flashpoint for risk. Companies are increasingly uncomfortable making individual decisions without collective backing.
2. Diffusion of Responsibility
Here’s a core driver: diffusion of responsibility. In uncertain times, managers don’t want to be the lone voice making a hire. Instead of owning a decision, the instinct is to distribute accountability.
That manifests in a few recognizable ways:
- More interview rounds → more voices = less individual exposure
- Broader stakeholder input → from finance to HR to team leads
- Committee decision forums replacing single hiring manager calls
In theory, this builds consensus. In practice, it slows everything down — especially when every stakeholder has veto power or unique criteria.
3. Risk Aversion Isn’t Just Corporate — It’s Human
It’s easy to point at process changes and blame “corporate bureaucracy,” but it’s also a psychological shift. In ambiguous environments, people default to caution. Questioning assumptions becomes defensiveness. Hiring choices feel more consequential. When you layer on remote/hybrid/onsite dynamics and rising employee expectations, the collective urge is to over-validate every candidate.
4. The Cost of Slow Hiring
Slower cycles carry real business impacts:
- Lost talent — top candidates accept quicker offers
- Team drag — unfilled roles mean workload pressure
- Elevated compensation — drawn-out negotiations often inflate demand
So What Can Organizations Do?
Here are three practical actions that help break the logjam:
Clarify decision rights
Define who must be involved versus who’s optional — and set timelines for each stage.
Limit rounds with purpose
Every interview should have a clear mandate. Avoid duplicative meetings under the guise of “more cover.”
Create structured alignment early
Before sourcing, lock in role expectations, competencies, and non-negotiables with key stakeholders.
Slower hiring cycles aren’t just an operational (and recruiting!) headache — they reflect deeper organizational dynamics around confidence, accountability, and risk tolerance. Recognizing that is the first step toward designing smarter, faster, more human hiring processes.
If this resonates with what you’re seeing in your business or market, let’s connect — there’s insight here worth unpacking together.
— Gregory Manthei, Pelham Berkeley Search
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