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    The new rules of executive hiring

    June 28, 20266 Mins Read
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    For years, executive hiring rewarded visibility, experience, and momentum. Then the market changed all at once.

    Today, many qualified leaders experience the same thing: Recruiter outreach has slowed, interview processes stall without explanation, roles disappear midsearch, and applications vanish into silence. After unanswered emails and dead-end conversations, even experienced executives ask the same question: 

    “Am I doing something wrong?” Most of the time, the answer is no. The market had changed, but most candidates are still following the old rules.

    I’ve spent 25 years in HR leadership across hypergrowth, transformation, and private equity-backed environments. I helped scale talent pipelines at Amazon during a time of aggressive talent competition. I’ve worked at companies where every hiring decision had to be justified against business growth, productivity, and EBITDA. I know what a hot market looks like from the inside, and what a cautious one feels like, too.

    This market is fundamentally different.

    The Market Shifted From Search to Selection

    Over the past decade, the executive job market favored effort and urgency. Companies competed for a limited pool of senior talent, processes moved quickly, and compensation escalated. Executives with strong résumés and visibility found opportunities.

    Now, the market is crowded with qualified candidates. Two years of layoffs across various industries have flooded the pool with experienced talent. At the same time, companies spooked by economic uncertainty, AI disruption, and pressure to do more with less are hiring cautiously. Approval cycles are longer. Risk tolerance for a “good enough” hire has dropped to near zero.

    These changes have turned the market from a search model into a selection model. Companies aren’t looking for more candidates. Instead, they identify specific individuals based on precise alignment, industry experience, operating context, and immediate value-add, selecting from a very short list.

    Executives who understand this are repositioning accordingly. Those who don’t are applying harder and wondering why the volume of activity isn’t producing results.

    What I’m Hearing From Both Sides

    From my perspective, I hear from both executives in the market and executive search professionals navigating it. The picture they paint is consistent.

    On the search side, inboxes are overwhelmed. The volume of qualified candidates responding to senior roles has increased dramatically, making it harder to move quickly. Prioritization is key. The executives who rise to the top are not always the most credentialed; they are the ones most clearly positioned to solve the company’s specific problem.

    On the executive side, the silence is the hardest part. Conversations that seem promising go cold. Processes that were moving suddenly stall. Much of that silence has a structural reason most candidates don’t know: Many searches are less organized internally than they appear from the outside.

    Roles get posted before internal alignment exists. Budgets freeze after searches begin. Internal candidates resurface. Priorities shift. The search that looked real was sometimes exploratory, a benchmarking exercise, or a placeholder while leadership figured out what they actually wanted.

    Ghosting is not always personal. Sometimes it reflects a company or leader that doesn’t yet know what they want. That’s worth knowing, not as an excuse for behavior but as context that shapes how you interpret silence and how you manage your own energy over a long process.

    The Market Intelligence Most Executives Don’t Have

    Beyond structural dynamics, there are behaviors in the market right now that leaders deserve to know about, not to become cynical, but to navigate with their eyes open.

    Compensation compression is real. Some companies, aware of the candidate surplus, are posting senior roles at ranges meaningfully below what those positions commanded in the market 18 to 24 months ago. Candidates who don’t recognize this pattern may assume the lower range reflects their market value. It doesn’t; it reflects leverage.

    Exploratory postings are common. Roles that appear active are sometimes in earlier stages of internal calibration than the job description suggests. Before investing heavily in a search process, it’s worth using your network to confirm whether the role and commitment are real.

    AI-driven screening is reshaping first-pass filtering. Sophisticated tools now narrow large candidate pools before recruiters even review the profiles. Executives who position themselves only for human readers may never reach one.

    What Actually Works in a Selective Market

    The shift from search to selection requires a different strategy, not more effort applied to the same approach.

    It means being visible before there’s a search. The executives I’ve seen break through aren’t those who applied the most; they’re the ones already known. They stayed connected to their networks, maintained relationships with recruiters between searches, learned new tools, shared perspectives, and showed up as thought leaders in their space. Visibility creates familiarity. Familiarity accelerates trust. Trust shortens the path to selection.

    It also means speaking the language of the business, not just your function. At every company I’ve worked with, where every decision runs through a financial lens, the executives who succeeded connected their work directly to growth, productivity, risk, and enterprise value. Functional expertise is assumed. Business fluency is what differentiates.

    The executives gaining traction lead with clarity, not chronology. They communicate a specific business value proposition:

    • What problem do they solve?
    • In what environment and under what conditions?
    • What changes because they are there?

    It also means treating your network as infrastructure rather than emergency equipment. Most senior roles are still filled through relationships and referrals. A trusted introduction changes your positioning. Executives who maintained their relationships during the good years recover significantly faster when the market tightens.

    The Market isn’t Coming Back. A New One Is Already Here

    I understand the frustration. I’ve watched talented people I’ve worked with and hired navigate a market that feels designed to demoralize them. The silence is hard. The uncertainty is hard. The compression of comp ranges and the opacity of processes that may or may not be real make it genuinely difficult.

    But the executives who are succeeding aren’t waiting for the old market to return. They’ve accepted that it isn’t coming back and have adapted their approach to the one that replaced it.

    In a selection market, the question is no longer, “How do I find more opportunities?” It’s, “How do I become the most obvious choice for the right one?”



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