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Friddy Hoegener
29 October 2025
Every day a supply chain role sits vacant costs your organization far more than an empty desk. Beyond the obvious recruitment expenses, open positions create a ripple effect: overburdened teams, delayed projects, and frustrated employees absorbing responsibilities that weren't in their job description. Yet despite these high stakes, many companies unknowingly sabotage their hiring processes before they even post the job.
The problem isn't a lack of qualified candidates or competitive compensation packages. The biggest barrier to successful supply chain hiring happens even before the first resume is ever reviewed. When stakeholders fail to align on what they're actually hiring for, the entire process becomes a costly exercise in miscommunication and missed opportunities.
In this post, we'll break down the critical pre-interview failures that keep supply chain roles unfilled and share actionable strategies to fix them before they derail your next hire.
Everybody knows open positions are costly, but most companies dramatically underestimate the true price tag of an unfilled role. A vacant supply chain manager position doesn't just mean one fewer person on your team. It means your existing employees are stretched thin, taking on responsibilities outside their expertise while their core work suffers.
The true cost of hiring an employee extends far beyond the posted salary when you factor in recruiting expenses, onboarding, training, and lost productivity during vacancy periods, companies can spend 1.5 to 2 times an employee's annual salary to fill and ramp up a single role.
The most damaging hiring failures occur before any candidate interaction begins. When hiring managers, HR teams, and department leaders don't align on role requirements, the result is a generic job description that attracts the wrong candidates, or worse, causes qualified professionals to self-select out.
Consider a company posting for a "supply chain manager." Without deeper stakeholder discussion, this title could mean wildly different things:
These aren't minor details. They're fundamental differences that determine candidate fit, compensation expectations, and long-term success. When internal teams skip this alignment conversation, they create a slow, frustrating hiring process for everyone involved.
Working with a specialized supply chain recruiter can help facilitate these critical stakeholder conversations before posting the role. Experienced recruiters know which questions to ask and how to surface misalignment early, when it's easiest to fix.
Generic job descriptions fail because they force candidates to make high-risk decisions with incomplete information. Here's what's really happening:
Applying for a job, especially when you're already employed, requires real effort: tailoring a resume, writing a cover letter, coordinating interview schedules, taking PTO for multiple rounds. Generic descriptions don't give people enough information to decide if that investment is worth it. Most simply move on rather than gamble their time.
When a job description is generic, it usually means the hiring team hasn't actually agreed on what they need. Experienced professionals have been burned by this before: they interview with five stakeholders who each want something different, waste six weeks in a disorganized process, and receive an offer that doesn't match what was discussed. They've learned to avoid these red flags.
Job descriptions should help qualified people self-select IN and unqualified people self-select OUT. Generic descriptions do neither. You end up with a flood of marginally relevant applications and miss the people who would be perfect fits but couldn't tell from your posting.
When procurement or operations roles stay open for months, it's rarely because qualified people don't exist. It's because your message doesn't give them enough information to engage. Generic postings create:
Before posting your next supply chain, procurement, or operations role, gather all decision-makers for a structured alignment session. These four questions should drive the conversation:
Move beyond "we're short-staffed" to identify the precise business challenge. Is it poor demand forecast accuracy? Supplier relationship gaps? Logistics cost overruns? The problem definition should directly inform required skills.
Generic competencies like "analytical thinking" don't differentiate candidates. Define concrete success metrics: "Reduce stockouts by 15% within six months" or "Consolidate supplier base from 200 to 150 vendors while maintaining quality standards."
Every hiring manager wants a purple unicorn, but prioritization is important. Separate must-have technical expertise from skills your team can develop through onboarding and training.
Supply chain hiring best practices 2025 emphasize forward-looking role design. As automation and AI reshape supply chain functions, ensure you're hiring for future needs, not just today's pain points.
Fixing pre-interview misalignment is just the starting point. Leading organizations are shifting from reactive hiring ("we need someone yesterday") to proactive talent pipeline development.
These practices are particularly critical as supply chain roles become increasingly specialized. Organizations that partner with recruiting firms recognized for their expertise in supply chain talent, gain access to proven frameworks and passive candidate networks that internal teams typically can't build alone.
Contact our team to learn how we help organizations align stakeholders and reduce time-to-fill for critical supply chain roles.
Download our FREE Interview Guide & Candidate Scorecards. This resource helps hiring managers streamline interviews, ask the right questions, and evaluate candidates fairly and consistently.
Hear more supply chain hiring insights on our Procurement Pulse podcast, where industry leaders share proven strategies for attracting and retaining top supply chain talent.
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