Time to Hire Optimisation for Enterprise and Operational Hiring
When a role sits open for three weeks instead of ten days, the cost doesn’t just reflect within your recruitment function.
In a warehouse environment, it’s an uncovered shift handed to an agency at short notice, or in a distribution network, it’s overtime absorbed by a team already running at capacity.
The time between a candidate entering your process and accepting an offer is a commercial problem, and most organisations have not yet diagnosed exactly where that time is going.
Slow time to hire is a friction problem. Candidates are dropping out, stalling or accepting other offers at specific, repeatable points in the hiring cycle. Those points are identifiable, measurable and they can be removed. That is what We Optimise diagnoses and fixes.
Faster Hiring Does Not Mean a Lower Quality of Hire
The concern is legitimate and rooted in a real pattern. Organisations that pursue speed by compressing or removing screening stages do produce worse hiring outcomes.
But it’s not the problem that most organisations with slow hiring cycles are actually facing. Most organisations are not slow because of their screening. They’re slow because of the gaps between stages, the friction in the application process, and the administrative delays that have nothing to do with candidate assessment. Removing those protects the quality of hire because strong candidates will follow the process all the way to offer acceptance.
The candidates who were assessed carefully and moved through quickly are more likely to arrive engaged and ready. The candidates who were assessed carefully and then left waiting are more likely to have accepted elsewhere, leaving you with whoever was still available.
Where the Hiring Cycle Loses Time
Most of the time wasted in the recruitment process is lost in the gaps, delays and friction points that sit around the assessment stages. Here’s where we consistently find it.
Application stage
Application forms designed for desktop that don’t perform on mobile create immediate attrition. A form that requires 20 minutes to complete or has unnecessary fields can lead to a high application drop off rate.
Screening stage
The gap between application submission and first contact is one of the most damaging points in the entire process. A candidate who submits on Monday and hears nothing until the following week is a candidate who has spent days receiving emails from your competitors. Manual shortlisting processes that create bottlenecks in high-volume hiring environments compound this delay.
Interview stage
Hiring manager availability is one of the most cited and least resolved causes of slow hiring cycles. In organisations with multiple decision-makers, the scheduling friction created by multi-stage interview processes without calendar coordination can add a week or more to the average time to hire.
The candidate experience during this period matters. Candidates who feel the process is disorganised draw conclusions about the organisation.
Offer stage
Approval chains requiring multiple sign-offs, slow contract generation, and reference and compliance checks that run sequentially rather than in parallel all extend the period between a positive interview and an accepted offer. This is the stage where strong candidates accept offers elsewhere.
Every one of these is a diagnosable friction point that can be addressed through candidate journey optimisation.
How We Optimise Improves Time to Hire
- Candidate journey audit – mapping every stage from first touchpoint to offer, measuring time-in-stage at each point, and identifying the friction generating the most loss.
- Application process review – to remove friction and rebuild the application experience for the devices and contexts your candidates are actually using.
- Communication workflow improvements – to close the inter-stage gaps that lose candidates to competing offers.
- Screening process review – we look at where shortlisting is creating bottlenecks in high-volume hiring environments.
- Hiring manager workflow – availability windows, structured feedback loops, calendar coordination across multi-stage processes.
- Pipeline health assessment – establish whether your organisation is permanently reactive because no pre-built candidate pool exists for its recurring role types. Reactive hiring is inherently slower hiring.
What a Faster Hiring Cycle Produces
For talent acquisition teams, the outcomes are measurable across the metrics that matter:
- Faster time to fill across the role types where friction was concentrated.
- Higher application completion rates that produce larger, better pools without increasing attraction spend leading to lower cost-per-hire.
- Candidates arriving at the offer stage with interest intact rather than exhausted by a slow process.
For operations teams, the outcomes are visible in:
- More predictable workforce supply in the weeks leading into demand peaks.
- Less exposure to agency rate volatility when headcount is being built at pace.
- Hiring that is fast enough to match the rate at which vacancies are generated, rather than permanently running behind it.
Why Choose We Optimise
The organisations that work with us are running serious hiring operations: high volumes, multiple sites, frontline roles, seasonal peaks, performance scrutiny. We’re a partner that understands what slow time to hire actually costs and takes a structured, data-led approach to fixing it.
Our diagnostic process starts with your organisation’s own data. The candidate journey audit maps what is actually happening in the process, stage by stage, and builds a prioritised picture of where effort produces the most return.
We identify the friction, we remove it, and we measure the change. For the broader context of what enterprise and frontline hiring optimisation looks like across our full service offer, see volume hiring agency services.