Recruitment teams have never had more technology at their fingertips. From end-to-end platforms to AI scheduling tools, CRM overlays and branded assessment platforms, we’re swimming in solutions.
But there’s a problem no one talks about enough: most recruitment tech stacks are bloated.
The market has convinced us we need more than we do. And in doing so, we’ve started designing our processes around the limitations of tools, not the needs of our people, teams or businesses.
When that happens, recruitment becomes reactive. We adapt to the quirks of the software instead of asking bigger questions. Why do we recruit this way? What do we want the experience to feel like? What actually works for our business?
Tools should enable great recruitment. Not define it.
How to take control of your recruitment systems
Before you add another platform to your stack (or renew something out of habit) pause and take stock. Your recruitment process should be shaped by your organisation’s unique needs. Not what your ATS allows. Not what the integration supports. And definitely not what a vendor roadmap promises.
Here’s what a thoughtful approach to tech looks like:
- Start with your values and candidate experience, build backwards from there
- Identify where your team genuinely needs to be more effective, be brutally honest
- Remove tools that add complexity without clear ROI, be ruthless
- Adapt processes around the outcomes you want, not features
- Explore customisation or in-house builds where possible, we love this approach at August and it’s proven to be incredibly valuable.
- Prioritise tools that offer adaptability over ones that force standardisation
And most importantly, ask this: “if I stripped it all away tomorrow, could we still recruit well?”
If the answer is no, you have a capability issue. If the answer is yes, you have an opportunity to streamline.
Sometimes, less really is more
At a time when tech is advancing rapidly, it’s tempting to keep adding. But the most future-ready teams I know are doing the opposite. They’re auditing. They’re simplifying. They’re choosing tools that align with their process, not contorting their process to fit a platform.
They understand that great recruitment isn’t about toolkits. It’s about clarity of thought. About process discipline. About being intentional at every stage.
When you have that foundation, you don’t need six different logins and a browser full of tabs to deliver great work. You need clarity, consistency, and a handful of tools that make your life easier, not heavier.
It’s worth asking: how much of your current stack is supporting your goals? And how much of it is just noise?
Because the best tech doesn’t replace great recruiters. It frees them up to do more of what they’re best at, engaging humans, creating moments of delight (I’ll touch on this more next week) and influencing, not wrangling platforms.
If the tools you use aren’t doing that, then what are they doing?
It’s time to simplify. To strip things back. And to rebuild around how you want to recruit, not just how you’ve always done it.