In a competitive market, the best candidates have options. You don't lose them because your company isn't good enough — you lose them to avoidable, self-inflicted mistakes. Here are the five we see most.
1. You move too slowly
This is the big one. Your favorite candidate is almost certainly someone else's favorite candidate too. A two-week gap between "great interview" and "next steps" is all it takes for a competing offer to land. Decide fast, schedule fast, and have your process mapped before you start.
2. Your interview process is a marathon
Five rounds, three case studies, and a panel of nine people doesn't signal rigor — it signals indecision, and it exhausts good candidates. Respect their time. If you can't make a confident decision in three or four well-run conversations, the problem isn't the candidate.
3. You lowball the offer
Trying to "win" the negotiation by a few thousand dollars is how you lose the hire and start the relationship on a sour note. Know the market rate for the role, and make a strong, fair offer the first time. The cost of a re-opened search dwarfs the savings.
4. You go quiet
Silence reads as rejection. A candidate who doesn't hear from you for a week assumes they're out — and starts saying yes to other people. Over-communicate. A two-line "still interested, here's where we are" email keeps your best people warm.
5. You sell the job like a job posting
Top candidates aren't just evaluating the role — they're evaluating you. Generic "fast-paced environment, competitive salary" language doesn't land. Tell them what's genuinely good about working there, who they'll learn from, and where the role can take them.
The fix
Most of these come down to the same thing: a tight, respectful, well-run process. That's exactly what a good recruiter helps you build — keeping candidates engaged, surfacing problems before they cost you the hire, and giving you honest read-outs at each step.
Hiring and want it to go smoothly? Tell us what you need — the first conversation is free, with no obligation.
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