Your hiring lead is tired. Your managers are annoyed. The role has been open long enough that people now refer to it as “that role” with the same tone they use for a chronic plumbing issue. Meanwhile, your inbox is full of resumes that are either wildly off-target or suspiciously perfect.
And then someone says you have a talent problem.
Maybe. But most companies don't have a dozen separate talent acquisition challenges. They have three or four recurring dysfunctions wearing different hats. Slow decisions. Bad screening. Tiny talent pools. Bloated interview loops. Weak candidate communication. That's the whole circus.
I've seen founders blame the market, blame Gen Z, blame remote work, blame recruiters, blame compensation bands, and once, somehow, blame the careers page font. Cute theory. Usually wrong. The companies that hire well aren't magical. They just fix the system instead of admiring the symptoms.
Let's translate the usual complaint.
You say: “We can't hire.”
What's often true: your process leaks good candidates, your requirements are inflated, and your team still thinks hiring is a side quest.
This isn't rare. SHRM's 2025 Talent Trends research found that 69% of U.S. organizations still reported difficulty recruiting for full-time regular positions. That's not a niche problem. That's a giant sign flashing: the old playbook still isn't working.
When leaders talk about talent acquisition challenges, they usually mash together very different issues:
Those aren't market forces handed down from the heavens. Those are operating choices.
Practical rule: If your team says “we just need more candidates,” check whether you actually need more qualified candidates, a faster process, or fewer interviewers with opinions.
Founders love to think their pain is unique. It feels better. More cinematic. But the same pattern shows up again and again. The company posts a role, waits too long, screens inconsistently, interviews endlessly, and then acts shocked when the best candidate takes another offer.
If your hiring machine is noisy, slow, and subjective, more applicant volume won't save it. You'll just get a larger pile of chaos.
The good news is that this stuff is fixable. Not easy, but fixable. Most talent acquisition challenges are symptoms. Treat the root cause and half the “talent shortage” story falls apart.
The laziest sentence in hiring is “there just isn't any talent out there.”
There is talent out there. What's out there less often is talent that fits your exact wishlist, at your price point, in your geography, available immediately, willing to survive your six-step interview loop, and still cheerful after being ghosted by your hiring manager for nine days. That's not a shortage. That's a scavenger hunt you designed badly.
In a 2023 employer survey, 57% of employers said their top recruitment challenge was a lack of qualified candidates, while 50% cited strong competition from other employers and 41% cited candidate ghosting, according to ZipRecruiter's employer survey summary. That should end the “nobody wants to work” speech immediately.
The pattern is obvious. The problem isn't just applicant volume. It's qualified and responsive applicant volume, plus your ability to close them before someone else does.
A lot of companies create their own mismatch with job descriptions that read like ransom notes. Must have this exact title. Must come from this exact industry. Must have this exact stack. Must live within commuting distance of the office nobody likes. Then they call the result a market problem.
If you only hire from your city, your network, and your usual shortlist of backgrounds, you are manufacturing scarcity.
Try this instead:
| Old habit | Better move |
|---|---|
| Hiring for pedigree | Hire for demonstrated capability |
| Filtering by exact prior title | Filter by transferable outcomes |
| Restricting geography | Open remote and cross-border options where practical |
| Writing wish-list job ads | Separate must-haves from trainable skills |
That doesn't mean standards should drop. It means standards should become clearer.
The “skills gap” is often a search gap wearing a nicer outfit.
You don't need a philosophy retreat. You need operational changes.
If your company keeps complaining about talent acquisition challenges while using the same cramped search strategy, you're not facing a mystery. You're repeating a choice.
Slow hiring isn't cautious. Slow hiring is expensive, demoralizing, and weirdly self-congratulatory. Teams act like adding another interview proves rigor. Usually it proves indecision.
That “quick chat” with one more stakeholder? It's not harmless. It tells the candidate your company can't make a call without assembling a jury.

A lot of talent acquisition challenges are self-inflicted. Recent employer guidance highlights redundant interviews, lack of standardized scorecards, and slow decision-making as direct contributors to candidate drop-off. The same guidance points out that 41% of employers cite candidate ghosting as a major issue, according to EnvisionRPO's discussion of employer hiring friction.
Some ghosting is unavoidable. A lot of it is earned.
Candidates don't experience your process as “thoughtful.” They experience it as a signal. Slow means disorganized. Repetitive means nobody aligned internally. Vague feedback means no one knows what good looks like.
If your hiring funnel feels mushy, start here:
If this is a recurring problem, it's worth looking at practical ways to reduce time to hire before another strong candidate disappears into someone else's onboarding queue.
Fast hiring doesn't mean sloppy hiring. It means your team already agreed on what matters.
Founders obsess over product UX, then make candidates endure a hiring process that feels like filing insurance paperwork.
That's backwards.
A strong candidate experience has a few boring, effective traits:
None of this is glamorous. It just works. The companies that keep losing finalists usually don't need more sourcing channels first. They need fewer delays, fewer vanity interviews, and fewer people “just wanting to meet the candidate.”
The resume is not a truth document. It's a marketing asset.
That doesn't make resumes useless. It makes them incomplete. Yet plenty of teams still treat keyword matching and “strong background” as if they're reliable predictors of actual performance. Then they act surprised when the hire can interview beautifully and still miss the work.
While 51% of employers name too few applicants as a top challenge, the bigger issue is often filtering signal from noise. The most common problem is a lack of qualified applicants, not a lack of applicants overall, as noted in Stivers' review of current talent acquisition trends and challenges.
That distinction matters.
A messy funnel creates two bad outcomes at once. Weak candidates slip through because nobody validated actual skills early. Strong candidates get screened out because they didn't use the right buzzwords, came from the “wrong” company, or didn't charm the first interviewer in exactly the preferred dialect of confidence.
Unstructured interviews are where a lot of hiring quality goes to die.
You know the pattern. One manager likes polished communicators. Another likes people who remind them of their younger self. A third says the candidate was “good, but not quite senior enough” without defining senior once in the whole process. Congratulations, you've built a selection system out of vibes.
Here's what works better:
A practical way to tighten the front end is using pre-employment skills testing before the interview panel starts free-associating.
A candidate should earn points for competence, not for sounding like your top salesperson on a coffee chat.
Most leaders notice the false positives. They hire someone who looked great and performed badly.
They miss the false negatives.
That's the stronger candidate who never gets a fair shot because your process overweights resumes, underweights proof, and lets bias masquerade as instinct. If you want better hiring outcomes, stop worshipping the perfect resume and build a better filter.
Remote hiring sounds simple right up until you try to do it properly. Then the fun starts. Payroll rules, local labor requirements, classification questions, onboarding logistics, time zone coordination, manager habits, communication norms. It's amazing how quickly “let's hire remotely” turns into “why is legal suddenly in this Slack channel?”
And that's just the operational half. The other half is whether anyone good actually wants to work with you.

A sloppy local process becomes an even sloppier cross-border one.
When hiring remotely, tighten these first:
| What goes wrong | What to do instead |
|---|---|
| Compliance reviewed at the end | Review employment setup before sourcing aggressively |
| Candidate messaging feels generic | Explain async norms, hours overlap, and team rituals clearly |
| Managers improvise interviews | Standardize the process across locations |
| Employer brand lives only in the office | Turn culture into documented practices, not hallway folklore |
If your outreach strategy is shaky, benchmark it before blaming the candidate pool. This breakdown of recruiting outreach success rates is useful because it gives teams a reality check on whether their sourcing messages are landing.
Free snacks were never a brand. A foosball table was not a culture strategy. Remote work just exposed that faster.
Your employer brand now lives in things candidates can feel:
That matters across borders because candidates are evaluating whether your team knows how to work remotely, not just whether it allows remote work.
You can absolutely learn cross-border hiring mechanics yourself. You can also learn tax law for fun and rebuild your own bathroom plumbing. I don't recommend either as a growth strategy.
For most companies, the sane move is using an integrated setup that handles employment logistics, payroll, legal compliance, and onboarding together. That keeps your team focused on hiring the right person instead of reverse-engineering international paperwork at midnight.
AI in hiring is useful. AI in hiring is also overhyped. Both things are true.
If you use it like a glitter cannon, you'll automate bad decisions faster. If you use it like a disciplined operations tool, it can remove a shocking amount of recruiting sludge.

Digital talent acquisition tools like AI screeners are now central, but their effectiveness depends on proper governance. The academic guidance is straightforward: use AI for automatable tasks that don't require human judgment, and validate systems for bias before trusting their outputs, as discussed in research on digital talent acquisition systems and governance.
That means AI is great for:
It is not a license to automate the parts that require nuance, context, and accountability.
Don't hand final judgment to a model and call it innovation.
Humans should still own:
That split matters because the goal isn't “more AI.” The goal is better hiring decisions with less wasted motion.
Good automation removes admin. Bad automation removes accountability.
If you want a modern answer to talent acquisition challenges, use this operating model.
Open up the talent pool. Remote and cross-border sourcing give you more shots on goal and less dependence on one overheated market.
Use tooling for sourcing, screening, scheduling, and skills validation. For example, AI-powered recruitment tools can support the repetitive top-of-funnel work so recruiters spend less time triaging and more time evaluating.
Spend human time where candidates feel it. Thoughtful interviews. Clear close conversations. Strong onboarding. Real manager engagement.
One practical example is LatHire, which combines AI-assisted matching and skills evaluation with human-led background checks and operational support for cross-border hiring. That's the right general shape. Automation on repeatable tasks. Humans on judgment calls.
You do not need another meeting about how hard hiring has become.
You need fewer bottlenecks, better screening, wider talent pools, and managers who understand that recruiting is part of the job, not an interruption to it. The companies still using the old playbook are getting the old result. That's not bad luck. That's consistency.
SHRM's 2025 Talent Trends research says 69% of U.S. organizations still struggle to recruit for full-time regular positions. If nearly seven in ten organizations are stuck, stop assuming your pain is unique. Traditional methods are failing a lot of people at once.
It does require discipline.
And once you do make the hire, don't fumble the landing. Even simple things like a clear new employee announcement template help teams turn a signed offer into a real arrival, not just an HR paperwork event.
Most talent acquisition challenges aren't fate. They're what happens when an outdated hiring system meets a faster market. Fix the system, and hiring gets easier. Keep romanticizing the struggle, and you'll still be “urgently hiring” six months from now.