Recruiter productivity in VP and C-suite search is one of the least measured variables in talent acquisition. Most organisations track total hires and time-to-fill. Few track the input variables that determine those outputs: mandate load per recruiter, outreach throughput, pipeline stage velocity, and response rate per recruiter. This page documents the benchmarks.
Mandate Load Benchmarks
Recruiter productivity at the VP search level degrades non-linearly above a mandate load threshold. Up to 3–4 concurrent VP mandates, performance holds. Above 4–5 mandates, response time to candidate inquiries, outreach quality, and pipeline review frequency all degrade measurably. The degradation is not gradual — it crosses a threshold and drops sharply.
| Mandate Load | Expected Performance State | Majhi OS Monitoring Status |
|---|---|---|
| 1–3 concurrent mandates | Optimal — full attention available per mandate | Green / Healthy |
| 4–5 concurrent mandates | Acceptable — minor attention dilution | Yellow / Watch |
| 6+ concurrent mandates | Degraded — output quality and speed impaired | Red / Intervention triggered |
Outreach Throughput Benchmarks
Reply rate: 35% target (vs 14% baseline)
Unverified outreach to unqualified contact lists produces a 14% reply rate — the industry baseline for recruiting outreach. DNS/MX-verified targeting (outreach sent only to domains with valid mail exchange records) moves this to 35%. The delta is not messaging quality: it is deliverability and list quality.
Pipeline stage velocity: 48–72 hours per stage
Candidates in active VP pipelines should move between pipeline stages (screened → interviewed → shortlisted → assessed → offered) within 48–72 hours of each stage completion. Stages that stall beyond 5 business days indicate either recruiter overload, hiring manager disengagement, or process bottleneck — each requiring a different recovery action.
Shortlist approval: 82% target (vs 38% baseline)
The industry baseline shortlist approval rate is approximately 38% — meaning 62% of presented candidates do not advance. This is almost entirely a brief calibration failure. Properly calibrated intake with behaviourally-defined success criteria moves approval above 80%. The benchmark is the evidence that intake investment is leveraged, not wasted.
What Operational Monitoring Changes
When these benchmarks are monitored in real time rather than reviewed in weekly status reports, the operational difference is early detection vs. reactive recovery. A recruiter whose reply rate drops from 35% to 18% over two weeks is detectable in week two — before the pipeline has emptied. Without monitoring, the same recruiter's mandate shows no visible problem until week 6 or 7, when the pipeline has already collapsed and recovery is more expensive.
"Recruiter productivity is not intuitable. It requires instrumentation. The benchmarks are only useful if they are measured — not estimated."