Hiring Capabilities: The Key to Building a High-Performing Talent Team

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Recruiting

Let’s start with a simple but crucial question:

What makes a great hiring team?

Most people would say: “Great recruiters.” And sure, that’s part of it. But hiring excellence isn’t just about individual recruiters – it’s about the collective capabilities of your entire talent acquisition function.

Think about it this way: A world-class football team isn’t just made up of elite strikers. You need defenders, goalkeepers, coaches, and strategists – all working together, building specialized skills, and aligned under a single game plan.

Hiring is no different.

At the most basic level, an immature hiring team operates like a group of amateurs in a casual Sunday league match – no structure, no strategy, just reacting.

But when hiring capabilities are fully optimized, recruiting becomes a competitive advantage. Talent professionals evolve from being recruiters to strategic talent advisors, workforce planners, and hiring influencers.

So, let’s explore the five levels of hiring capability maturity and see where your organization fits.

A representation of the hiring excellence maturity model, tracking core components across the five different levels of hiring evolution.

The Hiring Capability Maturity Model

Level 1: Basic Hiring Skills – The Survival Stage

At this stage, hiring is entirely reactive, focused only on managing applicants.

Core Capabilities at Level 1

Basic resume screening (manual, subjective)
Basic offer and onboarding process
Compliance with legal hiring requirements

Why This Holds Companies Back:

  • No ability to source talent – If good candidates don’t apply, hiring stalls.
  • Poor candidate experience – Hiring managers make inconsistent decisions, leading to slow and unstructured hiring.
  • No competitive advantage – The company relies solely on job postings, with no proactive hiring strategy.

At Level 1, hiring is a function that exists because it has to – not because it drives business success.

Level 2: Expanding Capabilities – Moving Beyond “Post & Pray”

Companies at this stage recognize that job postings alone aren’t enough and start building a dedicated recruiting team.

Core Capabilities at Level 2

 Candidate Engagement: Crafting compelling outreach and employer branding
 Recruiter Training: Foundational training in screening and hiring best practices
 Offer & Negotiation: More structured salary offers and closing techniques

At this level, hiring teams actively compete for talent instead of just screening applicants. Recruiters develop sourcing skills and improve the candidate experience with structured interviews.

What’s Still Missing?

The focus remains too recruiter-centric – there’s little involvement from hiring managers or the broader business.

Hiring isn’t an individual sport. It’s a team sport.

Level 3: Hiring as a Team Sport – Scaling Beyond the Recruiter

At this level, organizations realize that great hiring requires more than just great recruiters. It requires:

  • Trained hiring managers who know how to assess and attract top talent
  • A structured, repeatable hiring process
  • Cross-functional collaboration across the business

Core Capabilities at Level 3

 Talent Advisory: Recruiters advise hiring managers, rather than just taking job orders
 Hiring Process Ownership: Clear accountability across the hiring team (not just recruiters)
 Internal Collaboration: Cross-functional hiring strategies with key stakeholders

At this level, recruiters evolve from order-takers to business partners. They don’t just fill roles – they influence hiring strategy.

As renowned talent leader Allyn Bailey says, “1 in every 10 people in your TA team should be focused on TA Operations.”

Level 4: Data-Driven Hiring – When Insight Becomes Your Competitive Edge

At Level 4, hiring shifts from being operational to strategic. Recruiters aren’t just executing hiring processes – they’re business consultants armed with data.

Core Capabilities at Level 4

 Strategic Workforce Planning: Aligning hiring strategies with business goals
 Recruiting as a Business Function: TA leaders embedded in workforce planning discussions
 Performance Measurement: Tracking time-to-fill, quality of hire, and sourcing effectiveness

At this stage, recruiters start asking bigger, more strategic questions:
Should we assess first, or sell first?
Should we hire externally, or promote internally?
What’s the best interview process based on past hiring data?

At Level 4, hiring is no longer just about filling roles – it’s about making smarter workforce decisions.

Level 5: The Talent Partner Model – Beyond Hiring, Into Workforce Strategy

At Level 5, recruiters aren’t just hiring experts – they’re talent strategists.

Core Capabilities at Level 5

 Strategic Talent Consulting: Recruiters assess whether hiring, reskilling, automation, or restructuring is the best solution
 Hiring as a Competitive Advantage: The company’s ability to attract and develop talent is a core driver of success

At this level, hiring isn’t just a function – it’s a true strategic lever for the business.

Recruiters don’t just ask:
“What role do you need filled?”

They ask:
“Do we even need to hire? Could we upskill? Automate? Restructure?”

Where Does Your Hiring Team Sit Today?

Ask yourself:

Are we investing in training to keep pace with talent acquisition trends?
Are our recruiters influencing business decisions, or just filling jobs?
Does our organizational culture encourage learning and hiring innovation?

The best companies don’t just have good recruiters – they build great hiring capabilities across the entire business.

Because at its best, hiring isn’t just about getting people in seats – it’s about building a workforce that gives your company a competitive edge.

Next Up: Hiring KPIs – Are You Measuring What Actually Matters?

Having the right hiring capabilities is one thing—but how do you measure success?

Next, we’ll break down the key hiring metrics that separate good from great.

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