
A role has been open long enough that the hiring manager has stopped asking politely. Finance wants to know why agency spend keeps climbing. The TA team feels busy, but nobody can say with confidence whether the process is working.
That’s usually when companies start talking about key performance indicators recruitment teams should track. The problem is they often stop at the easy numbers. Time. Cost. Volume. Those matter, but they only tell you what happened inside the hiring funnel. They don’t tell you whether the person you hired is doing the job well, using the right tools, or settling into productive work.
In tech, that gap matters more than people admit. A signed contract isn’t the finish line. If a new DevOps engineer still hasn’t adopted the licensed tools they need after onboarding, your recruitment data is incomplete. If a new hire is in meetings all day and never gets proper focus time, that’s not just an onboarding issue. It says something about hiring quality, role design, and manager calibration.



