🧠When Everything “Has to Go Through HR”: A Warning Sign
If everything “has to go through HR,” you might be unintentionally signaling misalignment, weak leadership, or internal risk.
TJ Kastning
If you’re a construction executive or part of a busy HR team, you’ve probably said it:
“Everything has to go through HR.”
It sounds like structure. It feels like safety. But to candidates and recruiters, it often signals something else entirely:
A system that’s misaligned. A process without ownership.
A team that’s avoiding the one thing hiring really requires: leadership.
This article isn’t here to criticize. It’s here to gently surface what this setup might be saying—about your process, your people, and your priorities.
🎯 Why HR-Led Hiring Feels Like the Safer Bet
Let’s be honest—defaulting to HR involvement makes sense.
It protects time.
It centralizes communication.
It helps ensure fairness, consistency, and legal compliance.
In construction especially, where job sites are moving, schedules are tight, and back-office resources are stretched, leaders lean on HR as the filter and handler.
But when everything has to go through HR—and hiring managers are hard to access—here’s what often starts to go wrong:
đźš§ What Candidates and Recruiters Actually Experience
From the outside, this structure often sends the wrong message:
❌ “The hiring manager isn’t engaged.”
Even if they care, their absence says otherwise. Candidates want to know: Who’s leading this team? Will I ever meet them?
❌ “HR is blocking, not guiding.”
If HR is the only point of contact but can’t speak confidently about the role or timeline, recruiters feel stuck. Candidates feel forgotten.
❌ “Nobody is accountable for this hire.”
When HR owns the process but not the decision—and hiring managers stay distant—ownership dissolves. And with it, momentum.
đź§± The Structural Issue Behind the Bottleneck
Here’s the core dynamic:
Hiring is a shared responsibility. But most internal systems aren’t designed that way.
- Leaders assume HR is “handling it.”
- HR assumes the hiring manager will “step in later.”
- Candidates assume no one is driving.
And that’s exactly how it feels—like a car with no one at the wheel.
👷‍♂️ The Middle Manager Blind Spot
Let’s go one level deeper.
Often, the reason everything gets routed through HR is simple:
The hiring manager isn’t ready—or safe—to lead the process.
This isn’t about blame. It’s about equipping. Most middle managers were promoted for technical skill, not people development. So we see:
- A lack of interview skill—they don’t know how to assess beyond resume buzzwords.
- A discomfort with negotiation—they either fold or stonewall, losing candidates either way.
- A compliance risk—not out of malice, but out of ignorance around EEOC and legality.
- And perhaps most critically: a misunderstanding of their role.
They think their job is to do the work—or make sure others do it.
But leadership, real leadership, is something else:
It’s building people. Setting vision. Owning outcomes.
That includes hiring.
If they don’t see hiring as leadership, then HR becomes the de facto leader. And now HR isn’t guiding the process—they’re shielding the company from internal risk.
That’s not sustainable.
⚠️ Structure Without Leadership Is a Mirage
When hiring is filtered entirely through HR, you may gain some control.
But you lose:
- Speed
- Nuance
- Connection
- Ownership
And the people you do hire? Often, they’re the ones who can tolerate your slow, impersonal process—not the ones who elevate your team.
âś… A Better Model: HR as the Integrator, Not the Gatekeeper
You don’t need to sideline HR. You need to reframe their role.
Let HR shine as the integrator—the one who keeps everyone aligned, tracks the process, and enforces fairness. But make sure they’re doing it with the hiring manager, not instead of them.
Here’s what that looks like:
- Shared Prep: Before the search begins, HR and the hiring manager align on role clarity, candidate profile, and decision criteria.
- Shared Visibility: Candidates see both HR and the hiring leader throughout the process, building confidence and momentum.
- Shared Accountability: If the hire goes well—or doesn’t—everyone owns the outcome.
đź§© Want Your Hiring Process to Work? Equip Your Leaders.
Hiring can’t be something leaders delegate and forget.
It must be something they own and learn to do well.
That starts with training middle managers on:
- How to interview with clarity and consistency
- How to communicate vision to candidates
- How to make fair, timely, values-aligned hiring decisions
- And how to see hiring not as a task—but as leadership in action
Until that happens, HR will carry too much of the load, and your process will keep dragging.
Take the next step
đź‘· Companies
👉 Schedule an Exploratory Hiring Strategy Call
We’ll evaluate your current process, walk you through our system, and see if we’re a fit.
đź§° Candidates
👉 Apply for a Free Introductory Career Discussion
We’ll review your goals, explain our approach, and help you find the right leadership team to grow with.