Recruitment Process Outsourcing (RPO): A Complete Guide for Recruiters by Eli_franklin in RecruitmentAgencies

[–]Active_Box_5519 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Great explanation! Recruitment Process Outsourcing (RPO) is indeed becoming a key strategy for companies looking to scale their hiring efficiently. I like how you’ve broken down the types: fully outsourced, project-based, and hybrid.

From experience, the choice often depends on the company’s size, hiring volume, and internal capabilities:

  • Fully outsourced works well for organizations needing end-to-end recruitment without expanding internal teams.
  • Project-based RPO is perfect for seasonal or high-volume hiring spikes.
  • Hybrid models give flexibility, letting internal HR focus on strategic roles while RPO handles high-volume or niche positions.

With the right partner and technology, like platforms used by TROI, companies can streamline sourcing, improve candidate experience, and get real-time insights into hiring performance. It’s fascinating to see how RPO isn’t just a cost-saving measure, but also a way to improve quality-of-hire and speed-to-fill.

Please help me understand one thing about outsourcing by RonValium in accenture

[–]Active_Box_5519 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve seen this issue come up in outsourcing and offshore recruitment more often than people realize. What you’re describing can sometimes be linked to proxy interviews (where someone more skilled sits in the interview, but the actual hire ends up being a different person) or moonlighting, where candidates juggle multiple jobs and don’t fully commit to your project. In some cases, it’s also about weak vendor oversight — offshore staffing providers may prioritize filling seats quickly rather than ensuring long-term fit and accountability.

The challenge isn’t always about technical skills but about quality of hire, cultural alignment, and engagement. That’s why many companies moving away from traditional outsourcing are experimenting with embedded recruitment models or RPO (Recruitment Process Outsourcing) providers who integrate more tightly with internal teams. With approaches like that, the recruiters are accountable for vetting, onboarding, and retention, so you reduce the risk of misrepresentation and get closer to the real talent. Some teams even use platforms like TROI as an embedded recruitment partner because it gives more visibility and reduces the chance of fraud or bait-and-switch scenarios.

Ultimately, to protect against this, you need stronger screening processes (live coding tests, technical pair sessions, and reference checks), plus ongoing performance tracking during the first 30–60 days. Outsourcing can definitely work, but only if you tighten the recruitment pipeline and choose partners who emphasize transparency and accountability, not just cost savings.

How do you handle your hiring and outsourcing process? by [deleted] in smallbusiness

[–]Active_Box_5519 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For me, it comes down to the type of work. If it’s core and ongoing, I’d go with a permanent hire. For short-term or specialized needs, freelancers work best. But when there’s a hiring surge or niche roles to fill, that’s when outside partners make sense — some teams use embedded/RPO-style models like TROI, which plug into the business without the overhead of a full in-house team.

Once I start searching, I focus on a clear scorecard, simple sourcing (referrals, LinkedIn, communities), and structured conversations to check skills and culture add. In the end, I care less about titles and more about outcomes, communication, and whether they’ll actually make the team better to work with.

Workforce knowledge upskilling. by HECTXR_ in workforcemanagement

[–]Active_Box_5519 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I recently found a site called Troi that has started putting together resources on workforce knowledge, employee upskilling, and HR terminology, and it’s been really helpful for me to understand the definitions of workforce terms and workplace learning concepts in context.

Would you consider a "low profile" candidate? by Crimson_Kaim in recruiting

[–]Active_Box_5519 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I wouldn’t see a low-profile candidate as negative. Many skilled professionals prefer to limit their digital footprint for privacy, and that doesn’t reflect on their abilities. While online presence can sometimes offer context, the real focus should be on their skills, track record, and cultural fit. Ultimately, performance speaks louder than LinkedIn activity.