Why Hiring Feels Transactional (And How to Make It Human Again)

You apply for a role. You spend time tailoring your CV. Writing a thoughtful application. Preparing for the interview. You might even get through a few stages.

Then… silence. Or a generic rejection. Or an interaction that feels more like a process than a conversation.

At some point, hiring stopped feeling human.

When Did It Change?

It didn’t happen overnight. No one sat down and decided to remove the human element from hiring. In fact, most people involved are trying to do the right thing. But over time, something shifted.

  • More roles were posted online
  • More candidates applied
  • More tools were introduced to manage the volume

And slowly, the focus moved. From people… to process. From conversations… to workflows. From understanding… to efficiency.

Individually, each change made sense. Collectively, they created something else entirely.

The Experience Gap

Here’s the part that often gets missed. Hiring managers and candidates experience the same process in completely different ways.

For a hiring manager, it’s one of many priorities:

  • A role to fill
  • A pipeline to manage
  • A decision to make

For a candidate, it’s something else entirely:

  • A potential life change
  • A step forward, or sideways, or out
  • A moment that actually matters

That mismatch creates friction. What feels like a task on one side feels personal on the other. And when the process is optimised for speed and scale, that gap only widens.

When Efficiency Goes Too Far

Efficiency isn’t the enemy. But when it becomes the primary goal, something gets lost.

We see it in small ways:

  • Automated responses instead of acknowledgement
  • Structured interviews that leave no room for real conversation
  • Decisions made quickly, but not always thoughtfully
  • Feedback that disappears because there isn’t time

None of this is intentional. It’s a by-product of a system under pressure. But the result is the same. Hiring starts to feel transactional.

The Cost of Transactional Hiring

When hiring becomes transactional, both sides lose.

Candidates feel like numbers, not people. Hiring managers miss nuance, potential, and personality. Decisions become safer, not better. And over time, trust erodes.

Candidates disengage. Companies struggle to stand out. The whole experience becomes something to endure, not value.

It’s not just inefficient. It’s ineffective.

What Does “Human” Actually Mean?

It’s easy to say hiring should feel more human. It’s harder to define what that looks like.

It doesn’t mean removing structure. It doesn’t mean making everything informal. It means reintroducing what the process was supposed to do in the first place.

Human hiring looks more like:

  • Context over keywords
    Understanding the story behind the experience
  • Conversation over interrogation
    A two-way dialogue, not a one-sided assessment
  • Potential over perfection
    Looking beyond exact matches to what someone could become
  • Clarity over silence
    Communicating outcomes, even when they’re not positive

None of this is radical. It’s just been lost along the way.

A Different Approach

If the problem is scale, the answer isn’t more process. It’s better design.

Smaller, more relevant pools of candidates. More meaningful early interactions. Less filtering, more understanding.

That creates space for something different. Not just better decisions, but better experiences.

Hiring Should Feel Human Again

We didn’t design hiring to feel transactional. It became that way when scale overtook connection. The good news is, that means it can be changed.

At Matchez, we’re exploring what that looks like in practice. Not by adding more layers to the process, but by simplifying it, reducing noise, and creating space for real interaction.

Because hiring isn’t just about filling roles. It’s about people making decisions that shape their lives. And that should never feel like a transaction.


If you’d like to contribute your perspective, please join Matchez and we’ll be in touch, so that you can share your experience.