Management is inconsistent, and communication is often unclear, which makes it difficult to succeed. Recruiters are expected to hit aggressive metrics without always being given the proper direction or support. When numbers aren’t met, accountability tends to fall on recruiters rather than leadership.
While expectations are equal on paper, opportunities are not. The most placeable roles consistently go to the same group of “favorite” recruiters, while others are left with less viable reqs but still held to identical standards. If you’re not an Account Manager or closely aligned with leadership, it can feel like you’re operating at a disadvantage from the start.
There is a noticeable “inner circle” dynamic within leadership. Several members of top management are closely connected on a personal level, which can make it difficult for accountability to exist at the top. Feedback rarely flows upward, and when issues arise, responsibility is often pushed down rather than addressed at the leadership level. This creates an environment where real change is unlikely.
This isn’t just a one off experience. It's a common sentiment shared by many current and former recruiters, which makes the pattern hard to ignore.
The company promotes culture and “best workplace” recognition externally, but internally it can feel more performance driven than people focused. Much of the culture messaging comes across as surface level and not reflective of the day to day experience.
Compensation and benefits are solid, but expectations remain the same even when taking PTO, which can negatively impact performance unless you’re in a more favored position. Frequent process changes are framed as growth but often create confusion and make it harder to stay consistent.
Turnover is extremely high, and it often feels like experienced recruiters are replaced rather than retained or developed. Growth opportunities are limited, promotions and raises have stopped completely, and even strong performers don’t always feel supported. Leadership is very tight knit, which makes it difficult for new ideas or feedback to be taken seriously. Additionally, many team leads would benefit from more formal leadership training.