In-house recruitment is often reactive, whereas consulting demands a level of market intelligence a single employer cannot provide. Ekaterina Selezneva, a Lead Talent Acquisition Manager specialising in global executive hiring, explores why a consultancy mindset is now essential. She explains how cross-sector experience builds superior expertise and why external consulting is a strategic business advantage rather than a conflict of interest.
“The first time I brought a candidate to a hiring manager without being asked, I had sourced them three months before the role existed. That was a consulting habit, and it changed how I understood the job. In-house, you wait for a vacancy to open. In consulting, you build relationships on the assumption that it will eventually pay off. Those two starting positions produce different recruiters, and the gap shows up most clearly when a search gets hard.
In-house recruitment is reactive by design
There is nothing wrong with in-house recruiting. It develops real skills: deep knowledge of a company’s culture, close relationships with hiring managers, and speed built from repetition. But the structure of in-house work trains a particular reflex. A role opens, the search begins. That is how the function is set up, and the incentives reinforce it. Nobody in an in-house team is rewarded for building relationships with candidates when there is no open position to fill.
In consulting, that is exactly what you do. You meet candidates when there is nothing to offer them yet, no role, no timeline, no brief. You stay in contact. You track where people are going and why. By the time a search opens, you are calling someone who already knows you. In-house recruiters are rarely taught to work this way because the job structure does not require it of them. Consulting asks you for it from the start.
What you see when you work across many companies at once
Running an executive search in parallel with in-house work gave me access to something I could not have built any other way. I was simultaneously involved in the hiring processes of some of the largest technology companies in the market, not as an employee but as a consultant advising on senior and technical roles. I watched how different organizations briefed roles, evaluated candidates, and made decisions under pressure. You collect the best practices from the market and bring them back in. A recruiter who has only ever worked inside one company has no basis for that kind of comparison. They know their organization deeply. They do not know how a dozen others approach the same problem.
That comparative picture changes how you walk into a briefing meeting. I stopped arriving with a blank intake form. I arrived with a picture of who was available, what they were earning, and whether the profile being requested existed in the numbers the business assumed. A hiring manager who discovers mid-search that their ideal candidate does not exist at their allocated budget has lost weeks. That conversation belongs in the first meeting, not the fifth.
The funnel is a discipline, not a default
The approach to candidate shortlists also came directly from consulting. When you are working agency-side, your credibility with a client rests entirely on the quality of what you present. Sending a long list of candidates to avoid the discomfort of making a judgment call destroys trust faster than sending a short one. My target became: source five, interview five, present three, and one receives an offer. Fewer candidates, better matched, each one selected because I understood the hiring manager’s requirements well enough to filter for them. Rather than casting a wide net, you find the right people and present them clearly. That discipline does not develop naturally in volume hiring. It comes from working in a model where your judgment is the product.
The recruiter who has worked across both is a different professional
Those two things together, the proactive network built before any vacancy exists and the habit of arriving already informed, are what in-house experience alone does not produce. In-house work gives you speed, internal credibility, and a close understanding of how decisions are actually made within a business. Consulting gives you the comparative picture: how other companies hire, what candidates are experiencing across their searches, and where your offer actually sits in the market at this moment. A recruiter who has carried both develops a range that neither environment creates on its own.
The case for letting your recruiter consult
Many employers treat a recruiter’s consulting work as a conflict of interest. I understand the instinct, and I think it is mistaken. The recruiter who consults in parallel brings back a current, lived understanding of how the market is moving that no internal team can generate from inside a single company. They maintain relationships with people they can call today, not a database of contacts who have not heard from them in two years. When I needed to move fast on a difficult role, I was calling people I had genuine relationships with, built over years of consulting work alongside my in-house remit. That shortened searches. It improved the quality of what I brought to hiring managers.
The broader point is this: a recruiter who has seen how other companies approach the same hiring problems returns something to the business every time they open a search. Treating that breadth as a liability is a choice to keep your recruiter less informed about the market they are supposed to know better than anyone else in the building. The combination of both backgrounds is an advantage worth holding onto.”
