Recruiting in transition: Why “Hire & Pray” is no longer enough

It is said that diamonds are only created under pressure. We wouldn’t agree with this saying when it comes to recruiting. Under pressure, our judgment suffers. Under pressure, suitable candidates are more easily overlooked or applicants are hired overhastily who later turn out not to be suitable. The cost of bad hires runs into the hundreds of thousands.
Recruiters are under pressure from many sides. They have to find the best candidates in a competitive market. The willingness of young people in particular to change jobs is higher than ever, as are their demands on employers. These demands are not only directed at the job itself, but also at the application process. Companies that fail in the candidate experience lose the best talent during the selection phase. Decision-makers, on the other hand, expect their recruiting teams to fill positions as seamlessly as possible with talented individuals who are both professionally and personally convincing.
In a survey conducted by the Society for Human Resource Management, 53 percent of recruiters surveyed stated that the stress level in their job has increased compared to the previous year. And it continues to rise with every unfilled or incorrectly filled position.
We should be talking about resilience now at the latest.
And in its actual meaning. Because contrary to what is often assumed, resilience does not mean being particularly resistant. Instead, it is the ability to pick yourself up again after setbacks and look ahead with optimism. “Ability to recover” is an excellent translation.
Resilience is a psychological resource that people can ideally activate reliably. At the same time, it is by no means only natural or fixed. We can learn and train resilience. It plays a key role in enabling us to do a good job in challenging environments, in contact with different personalities and in the face of increasingly rapid change. This is another reason why resilience is a sought-after quality that can determine whether we are the perfect fit for a position or not. But also whether we would have been the perfect fit for a position, were rejected and still go into the next job interview with confidence. And whether, when we are on the other side and have to make hiring decisions ourselves, we allow ourselves to be paralyzed by bad hires from the past or consciously remind ourselves of them in order to learn and grow from them.
And whether we do not allow ourselves to be carried away even after overwhelmingly positive experiences. But remain vigilant, focused and self-critical. We conducted a study on this in a call center, the results of which can certainly be applied to recruiting (as a special type of sales). In the study, the top performers showed significantly higher scores for resilience and self-efficacy than those employees who were not convincing on the phone.
Resilience as a top skill
The latest Future of Jobs Report from the World Economic Forum names resilience as the second most important core skill (after analytical thinking) for work in 2025. Companies need resilient people more urgently than ever before – both in recruiting and on the applicant side. The key question is: How can organizations shape the conditions for recruiting teams in such a way that they do not burn out under the increasing pressure, do not become discouraged by failures in a highly competitive and complex environment, in other words become and remain resilient? How do decision-makers, HR management, recruiters and hiring managers find a common understanding to identify the best candidates? And how do resilient recruiters find resilient employees for all roles that need to be filled?
We clearly see companies as being responsible for creating an environment in which employees can use their resources and activate them again and again. The following approaches can be particularly useful with regard to the demands placed on the recruiting team:
Reduce workload with AI
Routine tasks, such as scanning CVs or scheduling interviews, can and should be automated so that recruiters and hiring managers can focus on what comes after the first impression.
Streamline the application process
With the help of AI-based personality diagnostics, key characteristics that go beyond the CV can be identified even before the actual job interview. The Big 5, as well as optimism and resilience, are some of these characteristics. The analysis reports provide recruiters with an excellent basis for deciding who is worth inviting to an interview. Which candidates are worth investing more time in and which are simply not a good fit. This approach benefits both sides. As applicants don’t want to spend an unnecessarily long time in a selection process where their chances of success are close to zero.
Recruiters can also use the reports from the AI analysis to make the following interviews more efficient. The reports we generate with Zortify are based on open text answers from applicants. And therefore provide wonderful starting points for an in-depth dialog. Instead of working through generic questionnaires, recruiters can use the evaluations to ask specific questions about the applicant’s personality, team dynamics and working style.
Backing up decisions with data
The personality data analyzed with the help of AI helps the recruiting team to implement two key aspects of good talent selection. Even under pressure: a consistent focus on the individual and an objective comparison with other candidates. The data enables everyone involved in recruiting to develop a common understanding. And agree on what is important in the further selection process.
For example, a candidate may be perfectly qualified, but not particularly resilient according to the analysis. This is where recruiters need to assess the options: Do we give top priority to skills and prefer to invest in developing the person’s resilience on the job, or do we opt for an applicant with the second-best CV but who has a distinctly resilient personality? – By making these factors discussable and developing a shared understanding of desired qualifications, organizations reduce the pressure on recruiters, decrease bias on all sides and increase the accuracy of hiring predictions.
Creating psychological safety
An environment in which mistakes are named as such, but are also seen as a learning opportunity, reduces the pressure on recruiters and promotes their resilience. Regular feedback loops between hiring managers and executives also help to understand each other’s work and challenges and improve collaboration.
KPIs instead of “hire & pray”
It is clear that the pressure on companies will not decrease in the years to come. On the contrary: Germany will lose seven million skilled workers by 2035 as the baby boomers retire and low birth rates follow. Competition for talent is likely to intensify further. At the same time, technological development is making huge progress. Which on the one hand increases the need for new skills, but can also massively relieve the burden on companies in general and recruiting teams in particular.
AI-based analysis tools can make the recruitment process faster, more targeted and more objective. As a result, recruiters have free resources to take on a proactive role. Instead of constantly reacting to urgent staff shortages, they can focus on the question of which skills and personalities the organization really needs to grow and thrive in the long term. The aim is to move away from a reactive “hire and pray” approach towards proactive, data-driven recruiting that ensures the company’s long-term talent supply. This kind of anticipatory, strategic workforce planning goes far beyond short-term recruitment. And ensures that the right employees with the right skills are in the right place at the right time.
From panic to precision: how data-driven recruiting brings long-term success
A key lever here is the use of data and KPIs. While Sales tracks in detail how effective measures are, this systematic approach is often lacking in Recruiting. However, in order to grow with their tasks instead of cracking, recruiters need to specifically analyze which factors have led to a successful hire or a bad hire. They can significantly increase their success rate by analyzing past wrong decisions, recognizing their own bias and learning from it.
At the same time, they need to develop a deep understanding of the company’s future requirements. This includes not only assessing skills and experience, but also taking into account personality traits, development potential and career paths. In order to anticipate market trends and build talent pools at an early stage. It is more important than ever for recruiters to work closely with managers and colleagues in business development and marketing (employer branding). At first, this may sound like even more work. In fact, this kind of rethinking takes a huge amount of pressure off recruiting teams because it replaces short-term panic with long-term, sound planning. And at best, this leads to smart and sustainable recruiting strategies.
That is, strategies that produce plenty of diamonds even without excessive pressure.

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