Quality hiring is replacing volume hiring: why recruitment is changing
Estimated read time: 4 minutes
Why companies are prioritizing better hires over faster hiring
Quality hiring is replacing volume hiring as the dominant recruitment strategy for roles where a bad hire is expensive to unwind. Quality hiring is a recruitment approach that prioritizes long-term fit, performance, and retention over speed-to-fill and headcount targets — where volume hiring optimizes for throughput (cost per hire, time-to-fill, requisitions closed), quality hiring optimizes for outcomes: 90-day performance scores, first-year retention, hiring manager satisfaction, and ramp-to-productivity time.
The economics are forcing the shift. Replacing an employee costs between one-half and two times their annual salary, according to Gallup's workplace research. For a recruiter closing 40 roles a quarter, a 20% first-year attrition rate isn't just a retention problem; it's a budget line that quietly doubles the cost per hire.
Many organizations still report high attrition, uneven employee engagement, and rising hiring costs despite increased recruitment activity. LinkedIn's 2024 Future of Recruiting report found that 73% of talent professionals say quality of hire is the metric that will most define recruiting performance over the next five years — ahead of time-to-fill and sourcing channel effectiveness.
The implication for HR and TA leaders: rapid hiring alone is unlikely to deliver long-term workforce success, and the metrics teams report on need to shift accordingly. Here's a contrarian take worth stating plainly: for high-volume roles below roughly $60K base, the ROI of a quality-hiring overhaul rarely breaks even inside 18 months — the math only works where attrition cost and ramp time are high.

What is quality hiring, and how do you measure it?
Quality hiring is the practice of evaluating, selecting, and onboarding candidates against measurable performance and retention outcomes not just resume signals or interview impressions.
In practice, most TA teams measure quality of hire using a composite score across four data points:
- First-year retention rate — what percentage of new hires are still in role at 12 months
- 90-day performance score — manager-rated performance against role expectations at the end of onboarding
- Hiring manager satisfaction — a post-hire survey, usually at 90 and 180 days
- Ramp time to productivity — weeks until the hire performs at expected output
Frameworks such as competency-based assessment, structured behavioral interviewing, and work-sample testing tend to correlate more strongly with these outcomes than unstructured interviews. Teams adopting these frameworks often pair them with a structured interview process to keep scoring consistent across panels.
The trade-off is real: quality hiring is typically slower and more expensive upfront. For seasonal retail, contact-center ramps, or hourly roles with predictable churn, volume hiring often remains the more rational choice. The shift toward quality hiring applies most clearly to roles where a bad hire is expensive to unwind engineering, product, sales leadership, and specialist functions.
Why quality hiring is replacing volume hiring as a recruitment trend
The largest driver is the cost of turnover. Frequent attrition is commonly reported to increase recruitment costs, disrupt team stability, and add pressure on HR teams. Hiring costs have continued to climb, particularly for senior and specialist roles where productivity loss during a vacancy compounds the direct recruiting spend. In practical terms, a single mis-hire on a six-month-ramp role can absorb the budget headroom a recruiter needed for two replacement searches that quarter which is why TA leaders are reframing the central question.
The focus is shifting from "How quickly can we fill this role?" to "How likely is this employee to perform and stay 18 months out?" and that question changes the assessment, the interview loop, and the metrics the team is held accountable to.
Candidate expectations have evolved
Salary and title still matter, but Gallup's workplace data indicates candidates increasingly weigh workplace flexibility, career growth, manager quality, and well-being alongside compensation.
The hiring experience itself has become part of employer branding. Candidates notice communication quality, interview transparency, timeline reliability, and the professionalism of the recruitment process and they share that signal publicly on Glassdoor and LinkedIn.
Some research suggests companies with structured, transparent candidate experiences tend to convert offers at higher rates and see stronger first-year retention. Rushed or impersonal processes, by contrast, often filter out the senior candidates a team most wants to land.
The rise of skills-first hiring
Traditional hiring leaned heavily on degree and previous-employer signals. A growing number of organizations now recognize that pedigree alone does not predict workplace performance—particularly in roles where the underlying tools or domain knowledge changes rapidly.
This has accelerated the shift toward skills-first hiring: evaluating candidates on demonstrated capability through work samples, assessments, case exercises, and structured competency interviews rather than resume proxies. HackerEarth Assessments supports structured skill evaluation across 1,000+ skills and 40+ programming languages, with rubric-based scoring that extends beyond engineering into sales, customer support, and finance roles. The platform's catalog claim — that it reduces time-to-hire by replacing resume screening with structured skill evaluation — is what makes the mention load-bearing here: the differentiator is breadth of skill coverage plus consistent rubric scoring across role types, not the assessment format itself.
For recruiters, the operational benefit is a shorter, more defensible shortlist; for hiring managers, it's a candidate pool already filtered against the skills the role actually requires. For a worked example of how this plays out, see HackerEarth's guide to technical assessment for hiring.
Recruitment is becoming more relationship-driven
Many organizations are moving away from purely transactional recruitment and investing in personalized hiring experiences — particularly for hard-to-fill technical and leadership roles. Three shifts are driving this:
- Personalized outreach over batch sourcing. Recruiters are spending more time understanding candidate motivations, career goals, and workplace expectations rather than processing applications at scale. In our experience working with TA teams, this correlates with higher offer-acceptance rates on senior roles.
- Recruiter behavior is changing. The role is moving closer to relationship management — staying in touch with passive candidates, mapping career stage, and timing outreach to readiness rather than requisition.
- Employer reputation compounds. Companies that run respectful and transparent hiring journeys tend to build stronger employer reputations over time, which feeds a healthier inbound candidate pipeline. The reverse is also true: one badly run loop on a senior search can surface on Glassdoor for years.
FAQ
What is quality hiring vs volume hiring?
Quality hiring optimizes for long-term outcomes — retention, performance, and hiring manager satisfaction — using structured assessment and skills-based evaluation. Volume hiring optimizes for throughput — cost per hire, time-to-fill, and requisitions closed. Most organizations need both, applied to different role types.
How do you measure quality of hire?
The honest answer: imperfectly. Most teams use a composite of first-year retention rate, 90-day manager performance rating, hiring manager satisfaction survey, and ramp time. The catch is that each input has reliability limits — manager-rated 90-day scores drift with how generous a manager runs their reviews, and first-year retention is at least as much a signal of management quality and team health as it is of the hiring decision itself. Treat the composite as a directional indicator, not a verdict, and triangulate across roles and cohorts before drawing conclusions about recruiter performance.
When is volume hiring still the right strategy?
Volume hiring remains the more rational choice for seasonal, hourly, or high-turnover roles where ramp time is short and replacement cost is low — retail, contact centers, warehouse, and entry-level operations. The cost of a slower, more selective process usually outweighs the marginal retention gain.
What frameworks support skills-first hiring?
Common frameworks include structured behavioral interviewing, competency-based assessment, work-sample testing, and standardized skills assessments scored against a rubric. Each replaces resume-based screening with a scored measurement of the skills the role requires.
Does quality hiring slow down time-to-fill?
Usually yes, upfront. Structured loops, skills assessments, and deeper hiring manager involvement add days or weeks to the process. The trade-off is paid back in lower attrition and faster ramp — but only for roles where a bad hire is expensive to unwind.
Take the next step
Ready to measure quality of hire on your technical roles? Explore HackerEarth Assessments to see how structured skill evaluation can shorten your shortlist and improve first-year retention. Or book a demo to talk through your current hiring metrics with our team.










