As of Q4 2021, there were over 11.1 million unfilled job positions in the U.S. The work is there. The people are harder to find.
If you've been searching for staff and coming up empty, you're not alone. The good news is there are staffing solutions built for exactly this problem. The trick is knowing which one fits your situation.
Know What Kind of Help You Need
Before you start calling agencies, get clear on what you need. Two things matter most: skill level and time frame.
On the skill side, there are three tiers worth thinking about. Commodity workers are dependable and don't require a specialized background — think factory floors, warehouses, basic retail. Skilled workers bring a specific capability to the table: typing speed, Excel proficiency, a second language, data entry. The skill matters, but deep expertise doesn't. Then there are highly skilled workers — people with real training and years of experience in a field like digital marketing, software development, or finance. You know which bucket you need. Start there.
Short-Term Assignment
Sometimes you just need someone to cover a gap. A team member goes on leave, a project spins up with a hard deadline, and suddenly you're short-handed. That's what short-term staff augmentation is for.
Long-Term Assignment
If you've had an open role sitting unfilled for months, a long-term placement can keep things moving while you search for the right permanent hire. It buys you time without leaving the seat empty.
Permanent Job Placement
Sometimes short-term or long-term just won't cut it. You need someone on the team for real. A good staffing partner can help you find that person — but ask upfront whether you get a say in the selection process. Some agencies handle everything and hand you a candidate. Others bring you into the process earlier. Know what you're getting.
Understand the Types of Staffing Augmentation
There's no single kind of staffing company. They come in very different shapes depending on who they serve and how they operate. A few of the main types:
Staffing companies — skilled workers
Specialized boutique staffing and consulting firms — skilled and highly skilled workers
Gig platforms — commodity and skilled workers
On-demand talent platforms — highly skilled workers
Pick the category that matches what you need before you start comparing individual companies.
Find a Staffing Solution in Your Industry
A quick Google search will bury you in options. Most of them won't be right for you.
Specialization matters. If you need a web developer, a firm that primarily places nurses isn't going to have a strong candidate pool for you. Find a company that knows your field. They'll have the right network, they'll ask better questions, and they'll waste less of your time.
Ask Questions
When you're talking to a staffing company you're considering, come prepared. Here's what you want to know.
How Does the Company Handle Sourcing, Screening, and Selection?
A company that owns the whole HR process — background checks, skill assessments, initial interviews — saves you real time. You want confidence that whoever they send you has already been vetted properly.
What Type of Staffing Service Do They Offer?
Sounds obvious, but worth confirming. If you want temp-to-hire or a long-term placement, make sure that's something they do. Don't assume.
How Are Poor Placements Handled?
Bad hires happen. Even with a solid screening process, some people interview well and underperform on the job. Ask the agency directly: what's the remedy when that happens? How they answer that question tells you a lot about how they do business.
How Big Is the Company's Talent Pool?
A larger pool means more options. More options means a better shot at finding someone who's a good fit for your team and your work culture.
How Well Do They Understand Your Industry?
Ask open-ended questions about your field and the specific role you're hiring for. If they specialize in your space, they should be able to speak to it. If they can't, they'll struggle to identify the right candidates for you.
What Are the Rates and Fee Structures?
Some companies bill separately for assessments and background checks. Others roll everything into one placement fee. Either model can work — just make sure the fee schedule is clear before you commit to anything.
Note Your Impressions
Pay attention to how the conversation goes. Did they answer your questions clearly? Did they get back to you quickly? Were they professional without being canned?
How a company treats you during the sales process is usually a preview of how they'll treat you as a client. Trust your gut on this one.
Talent Satisfaction
According to research cited by Chron, only 49% of employees are satisfied with their jobs. Unhappy workers leave faster, and they're 15% less profitable and 18% less productive than their satisfied counterparts. That's not a small gap.
When evaluating a staffing company, look at how they treat their talent. Check testimonials. Look at their benefits and compensation packages. Companies that take care of their people tend to attract better people — which means you get a stronger candidate pool to pick from.
Finding the right staffing solution takes some work upfront. But ask the right questions, know what you need going in, and you'll cut through a lot of the noise fast.