Speed is a Feature. Bureaucracy is a Bug.
"They are still looking." That is the sentence that kills projects. I recently saw a critical migration stall for six weeks. Not because talent was scarce. But because the "Preferred Supplier" list was rigid.
Speed in hiring doesn't mean rushing. It's about removing the unneccesary permission loop. If you need four signatures and three weeks to approve a freelancer, you have already lost the best one. Top talent doesn't wait for your committee meeting.
Why Speed Matters More Than Ever
In AI and Data projects, speed is leverage. Top freelancers leave the market in about 10 days (LinkedIn). A six-week hiring cycle on a six-month project burns 25% of the available time before work even starts. Let’s not even think about onboarding.
Every delay compounds:
- Stakeholders lose momentum.
- Budgets drift.
- The best people move on.
Speed isn’t about impatience. Speed is about staying competitive in a cycle measured in weeks, not quarters.
Where the Delay Comes From
Week 1 & 2: Internal Rounds
Job descriptions circulate, approvals queue up, and procurement adds its first checkpoint.
Week 3 & 4: Vendor Shuffle
The request bounces between consultancies, MSPs, and subcontracted recruiters. Each adds time and markup. Making specialists annoyed[link to article 2. Data-driven article about angry specialists]
Week 5 & 6: The First Shortlist Appears
Generic CVs arrive filtered by keyword, less on context and expertise. By then, your ideal candidate is gone.
Projects slow, teams stall, and “agile” becomes a PowerPoint word.
How to Actually Achieve Fast & Flexible Hiring
Speed doesn’t mean cutting corners. Collapsing hiring layers and trusting decision-making to expertise, is. Hiring fast in these situations isn’t comparable to qualifying Grand Prix in Monaco, it’s more like a pit-stop in endurance racing: precision, not hurry.
- Go Direct. Avoid MSP chains and subcontractor mazes. Each step you remove shortens the clock.
- Let Specialists Vet Specialists. A domain-fluent reviewer can surface fit in days, not weeks. Generic preferred suppliers are not the end-to-end providers.
- Simplify Contracts. Design templates built for speed. Compliant, not bureaucratic.
- Track Time-to-Contract Like a KPI. If it takes longer to sign than to onboard, your process is broken.
The Real Trade Off
You can either optimize for control or for speed, not both.
Traditional processes chase control: more checks, more layers, more delay. High-performing teams chase velocity: fewer handoffs, more trust in expert judgment. Do you see the discrepancy?
You can optimize for Control, or you can optimize for Velocity. You cannot have both. The market has decided: Velocity wins.




