In construction, there are things you can delegateāand things you canāt.
You can hand off your books to your CPA. You can outsource your legal paperwork. You can even bring in a structural engineer and trust them to run their calcs and sign off on your plans without much day-to-day oversight.
But you canāt expect a recruiter to do all the work for you.
Why? Because recruiting isnāt unilateral. Itās not a transactional service. Itās a co-owned processāand it only works when both parties show up.
šļø Recruiting Is Like Building a HouseāWithout the Full Set of Plans
Imagine a client hires your construction firm to build a custom house, but they bring only 60% of the plans.
They didnāt finalize the finishes. They havenāt decided how the family room connects to the kitchen. And halfway through the framing, they complain that you keep asking them questions.
Youād never accept that as a productive way to build.
Yet this is exactly how many companies approach recruiting: they want to hand off the work, disappear, and magically end up with a perfect hire.
It doesnāt work that way.
Recruiting Is Also Like Supplying Building Materials
Hereās another way to look at it:
Recruiting is often like providing building materials to a contractor. We supply the lumber, the fasteners, the framing crews.
But if the framing collapses because it wasnāt engineered rightāor the materials sat out in the raināit’s not the supplierās fault. Itās the builderās responsibility to use the materials correctly.
Hiring is the same.
We can help you source, assess, and introduce strong candidatesājust like a supplier helps you acquire top-tier building materials.
But if the hire doesnāt succeed because the role was poorly scoped, the team never onboarded them, or the leadership failed to provide direction, thatās not a recruiting issue. Thatās a construction failure with good materials.
Hiring authorities who expect success just because a recruiter was involved are like contractors who expect the building to stand just because they bought high-quality lumber.
The material mattersābut it still has to be used intelligently.
āļø What We Can Own
Hereās where we can take the wheel:
Once weāve scoped the role together and built a clear interview strategy, we can:
- Run a targeted, high-quality search
- Identify, screen, and vet candidates
- Drive outreach, coordination, and calibration
We can execute this piece independently because weāve laid the right foundationātogether.
But once candidates are in the mix, itās back to bilateral.
We need you to:
- Show up to interviews prepared
- Provide real-time, meaningful feedback
- Move quickly and stay engaged
- Be honest about what youāre seeing and what you want
Without that partnership, the best candidates walkāand the process breaks down.
š· Four Types of Hiring Authorities
Over time, weāve noticed four types of hiring leaders:
- Those who get it. They treat hiring like a strategic function. They engage, own their part, and see great results.
- Those who want to get it. Theyāre open. Curious. Willing to grow. Once they plug in, things take off.
- Those who donāt get itāyet. Theyāve been stuck in transactional habits. But they can changeāand when they do, itās transformative.
- Those who arenāt helpable. They want results without effort. They ghost the process, then blame the recruiter. We donāt work with them anymore.
If you’re in group 1 or 2, weāre ready. Group 3? Letās go. But group 4? Save your budget.
š§ What Great Engagement Actually Looks Like
Want to know what working together should look like? Hereās what high-accountability clients do at each stage:
1. Discovery
- Bring more than a job description
- Share business context, leadership dynamics, and past pain points
- Get aligned on success criteria
- Co-create a smart, role-specific plan
- Assign interviewers based on strengths
- Commit to structured, consistent feedback
3. Candidate Search
- Provide real-time calibration
- Stay responsive and communicative
- Collaborate on course-corrections when needed
4. Representation
- Tell the truth about who you are and whatās hard
- Follow through on commitments to candidates
- Treat people like people, not commodities
5. Onboarding & Integration
- Have a clear onboarding plan in place before the hire starts
- Schedule regular check-ins during the first 90 days
- Support the new hire relationally, not just functionally
This is what partnership looks like. And when itās done wellāit works.
š Ready to Build a Team the Right Way?
Hereās how to explore working with us:
- Evaluate your hiring approach ā Are you treating recruiting like a handoff, or like a co-owned process?
- Learn our process ā We bring structure, insight, and rigor to every stage. But it only works if you engage.
- Book an exploratory call ā Letās figure out if we should work together: Schedule here šļø
You canāt build a great team without a plan.
But if youāre willing to build with us, weāll help you get the people who build your future. šŖ