For years, talent acquisition has been driven by a simple goal: get more applicants.
More traffic.
More clicks.
More starts.
More completions.
On paper, it makes sense. More volume equals more opportunity.
But in practice, something isn’t adding up.
Because even as application numbers rise, teams are still struggling to fill roles with the right people. Quality feels inconsistent. Conversion feels unpredictable. And the same question keeps coming up:
Why aren’t we getting the candidates we actually want?
The answer is uncomfortable—but increasingly obvious.
You don’t have an application problem.
You have an influence problem.
Most hiring strategies are built to capture intent. Job boards, career sites, and programmatic ads are all designed to convert people who are already looking.
But what about the people who aren’t?
The highest-quality candidates—the ones companies say they really want—are often not actively searching. They’re not browsing job boards or comparing listings.
They’re working. Living. Scrolling.
And long before they ever consider applying, something else is shaping their perception of your company:
Influence.
By the time someone lands on your job description, a decision has already been forming.
Those answers don’t come from your careers page.
They come from people.
Peers. Creators. Employees. Voices that feel real, relatable, and credible.
This is where most hiring strategies fall short. They over-invest in the moment of application and under-invest in the moments that actually drive it.
Emerging research—and your own Q1 findings—point to the same conclusion:
People trust people more than brands.
Not slightly more. Significantly more.
And that trust doesn’t just influence awareness—it drives action.
When candidates hear about a job from someone they relate to, engagement increases. Consideration increases. And yes, applications increase—but from a much more qualified and aligned pool.
Instead of thinking in terms of:
Reach → Apply
It’s time to shift toward:
Reach → Trust → Action
Applications are no longer the starting point. They’re the outcome.
And trust is the multiplier that determines whether reach actually turns into results.
This doesn’t mean abandoning your current channels. Job boards and career sites still play a role.
But they shouldn’t carry the entire strategy.
The real opportunity is to build an influence layer that operates before intent exists.
That means:
Because when influence is in place, everything downstream performs better.
You can keep chasing more applicants.
Or you can start shaping who applies in the first place.
The companies that win won’t be the ones with the biggest funnels.
They’ll be the ones with the strongest influence.