What Recruiters Miss When Matching Is Too Rigid
This article is part of the Potential and Expandable Matching guide.
Rigid matching criteria are appealing because they create clean, defensible outcomes. A candidate either meets the brief or they do not. There is no ambiguity, no difficult conversations about near-misses, no need to explain why a borderline candidate was pursued.
The problem is what gets discarded along with the complexity.
The categories of missed candidates
The nearly-qualified candidate — Someone with the right experience, the right attitude and the right intent who is missing one qualification. In a direct-match-only system, they never appear.
The salary-gap candidate — Someone whose minimum salary expectation is £1,500 above the current band. Not an unreasonable ask. Not a negotiation-ender. Just a conversation that never happens because the system filtered them out.
The location-boundary candidate — Someone who lives just outside the travel radius parameter and is labelled "too far." In practice, they would happily make the journey.
The career-stage candidate — Someone who is slightly junior but growing fast, and who would be a better long-term hire than the over-experienced candidate who will be bored and looking again in six months.
The cumulative effect
In a well-supplied market, these missed candidates are a small loss. In a skills-short market, they can represent the majority of viable options. Rigid matching in a thin market is not efficiency — it is a structural impediment to hiring.
Optio’s tiered matching is designed specifically to surface these categories and give employers the information to make conscious decisions about them.
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