From Contingency to Engaged: When to Upgrade Your Hiring Model

Hiring in today’s food and beverage industry isn’t what it used to be. Labor shortages, rising competition for skilled professionals, and increasing operational complexity have forced employers to rethink how they attract talent. While contingency recruiting still plays a role, many U.S. food manufacturers and processors are discovering its limits especially when hiring for critical or hard-to-fill roles.
This article breaks down the differences between contingency recruiting and engaged search, explains when each model makes sense, and helps you determine when upgrading your hiring approach can support long-term business growth. By the end, you’ll have a clearer framework for choosing the right hiring model for your organization.
Why Hiring Models Matter in the Food & Beverage Industry
Food and beverage companies operate in a high-stakes environment. Production delays, quality issues, and safety risks can all be traced back to staffing gaps. According to data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, food manufacturing continues to experience persistent labor shortages, especially in skilled and leadership roles.
At the same time, the cost of a bad hire has increased. Beyond recruiting fees, turnover affects productivity, employee morale, and customer confidence. That’s why choosing the right hiring model isn’t just an HR decision, it’s a strategic business decision.
Understanding Contingency Recruiting: When it Works Well
Contingency recruiting is often the default model many companies start with, especially when hiring needs arise quickly.
What is Contingency Recruiting?
Contingency search is often the go-to model when speed is of the essence. With no upfront costs, it’s a performance-based approach where a recruitment agency is paid only if a candidate is successfully placed. This model works well when you need to fill multiple roles quickly, especially for positions that don’t require highly specialized skills.
Benefits of Contingency Search
- Speed: Contingency recruitment is ideal when time is of the essence. It’s typically quicker since agencies submit candidates for your review without waiting for a formal agreement.
- Cost-Effective for Short-Term Needs: Because agencies are paid only upon successful placement, you only incur costs when a candidate is hired.
- High Volume: If your company is experiencing high turnover or seasonal demand, contingency search helps fill roles quickly without major financial commitment.
That said, contingency search does have its limitations. If you’d like to dive deeper into how it benefits the food industry specifically, we encourage you to explore the benefits of contingency search in food recruitment.
Challenges with Contingency Search
- Quality vs. Quantity: Since agencies are paid based on successful placements, they may prioritize speed over the quality of the candidates.
- Higher Turnover: The rush to fill positions can lead to mismatches, both in skills and cultural fit. This results in higher turnover and a continuous cycle of recruitment.
- Limited Vetting: The quick turnaround doesn’t always allow for in-depth vetting, leading to hires who may not be aligned with the company’s long-term goals.
If you find your food business facing high turnover or struggling to keep up with the demand for new hires, it may be time to consider a more strategic approach.
What is Engaged Search and How is it Different?
Engaged search is a more tailored recruitment model. It’s built on a strong partnership between the employer and the recruitment agency. With engaged search, the recruiter is paid a retainer upfront, and the recruitment process is more thorough and strategic, aimed at finding the right fit for your long-term goals. This approach ensures that candidates are carefully vetted, aligning with both the role and the company culture, as seen in the way engaged search enhances candidate quality and cultural fit.
How Engaged Search Works
- Strategic Partnership: With engaged search, recruitment agencies work closely with your business to understand your needs, culture, and the long-term vision for the role.
- In-Depth Candidate Vetting: The recruitment agency spends more time on candidate vetting, ensuring a higher quality of candidates who fit not just the role, but the company culture.
- Long-Term Focus: The aim is not just to fill a position quickly but to find a candidate who will thrive in the role, reducing turnover and increasing productivity.
This method is why food companies are increasingly moving toward engaged search to build stronger, more stable teams. To learn more about how engaged search benefits the food sector, explore why food companies use engaged search.
Key Signs It’s Time to Move Beyond Contingency Recruiting
Not every role requires an engaged search. However, certain hiring scenarios strongly indicate it’s time to upgrade your model.
1. You’re Hiring for Specialized or Leadership Roles
Positions such as:
- Plant Managers
- Quality Assurance Directors
- R&D and Product Development leaders
- Supply Chain and Operations executives
require industry knowledge and targeted outreach. These candidates are often passive and won’t respond to generic job postings or mass outreach.
2. Your Positions Remain Open Too Long
Unfilled roles don’t just slow hiring they impact production schedules, safety standards, and profitability. If a role has been open for months despite multiple recruiting efforts, it’s often a sign the approach not the talent market is the issue.
3. You’re Experiencing High Turnover or Poor Fit
Repeated mis-hires cost far more than recruiting fees. Engaged search reduces this risk by prioritizing alignment over speed.
4. Confidentiality Is Critical
When replacing a current leader or planning a strategic expansion, discretion matters. Engaged search allows for confidential outreach without broadcasting sensitive hiring needs.
Key Differences Between Contingency and Engaged Search
To help you further understand the differences, here’s a breakdown of the two models:
| Factor | Contingency Recruiting | Engaged Search |
| Recruiter Commitment | Limited commitment due to non-exclusive searches | High commitment with dedicated time and resources |
| Payment Structure | Fee paid only after a hire is made | Partial upfront investment with remaining fee upon hire |
| Search Ownership | Multiple recruiters competing for the same role | Single, exclusive search partner |
| Candidate Sourcing | Primarily active job seekers | Active + passive candidates (targeted outreach) |
| Candidate Quality | Mixed quality; speed often prioritized | Highly vetted candidates aligned with role and culture |
| Role Suitability | Entry-level or high-volume roles | Specialized, leadership, and hard-to-fill roles |
| Time-to-Hire | Can be fast, but often unpredictable | More structured and predictable |
| Employer Involvement | High employers screen many resumes | Strategic employers review fewer, better-fit candidates |
| Confidential Searches | Difficult to manage discreetly | Well-suited for confidential or replacement searches |
| Risk of Turnover | Higher due to limited vetting | Lower due to deeper evaluation and alignment |
| Long-Term Value | Transactional hiring | Strategic, long-term talent partnership |
Contingency recruiting works best for high-volume or easy-to-fill roles where speed matters most. Engaged search is better suited for specialized or critical positions that require deeper evaluation, stronger alignment, and long-term hiring success.
Benefits of an Engaged Hiring Model
Moving to an engaged hiring model isn’t just about filling a role, it’s about strengthening your organization.
1. Better Candidate Quality
Engaged recruiters invest time upfront to understand what success looks like in your organization. This leads to candidates who are technically capable and culturally aligned.
2. Improved Time-to-Hire
While engaged search may seem slower at first glance, it often reduces total hiring time by eliminating rework, failed offers, and early attrition.
3. Stronger Employer Brand
Candidates notice when a hiring process is professional, transparent, and respectful. Engaged search improves how your company is perceived in the market.
4. Long-Term Talent Partnerships
Rather than transactional hiring, engaged recruiting builds a long-term relationship. Over time, recruiters develop a deep understanding of your business, making future hires more efficient and effective.
How Food Employment Supports Engaged Hiring Success
Food Employment specializes exclusively in the food and beverage industry, serving employers across the United States. This focus allows for a level of insight and network depth that generalist recruiters can’t match.
Our engaged search approach includes:
- Industry-specific market intelligence
- Access to passive, high-performing candidates
- Structured search processes with clear milestones
- Ongoing communication and measurable outcomes
Whether you’re scaling operations, replacing leadership, or preparing for growth, Food Employment acts as a strategic hiring partner not just a resume provider.
How to Decide Which Hiring Model is Right for Your Business
Before choosing a hiring model, ask yourself:
- How complex is this role?
- How critical is long-term success versus speed?
- What is the cost of leaving this position unfilled?
- Do we need confidentiality or specialized market knowledge?
If the role directly impacts safety, compliance, revenue, or leadership stability, engaged search often delivers better results.
For additional insight, resources from organizations like Deloitte’s manufacturing workforce studies highlight the growing importance of strategic talent acquisition in manufacturing-heavy industries.
Conclusion
The hiring landscape in the U.S. food and beverage industry has changed. While contingency recruiting still serves a purpose, it’s no longer the best solution for every role. As positions become more specialized and the cost of hiring mistakes increases, engaged search offers a smarter, more strategic path forward.
Upgrading your hiring model doesn’t mean abandoning flexibility, it means choosing the right approach for the right role.
If your organization is struggling to fill critical food and beverage roles or wants to improve hiring outcomes, Content Food Employment today to learn more about it . Our team partners with employers to evaluate hiring challenges and recommend the most effective recruiting strategy without pressure or one-size-fits-all solutions.



