How does a breakthrough innovation become tomorrow's baseline expectation? In 2012, Alex Ridder flew to Manila, believing he had solved the recruitment process outsourcing (RPO) challenges for the next 30 years. He established an offshore delivery center providing always-on sourcing, centralized compliance, and massive cost savings. These capabilities seemed revolutionary at the time. Today, those same innovations operate as hygiene rather than a competitive advantage.
Nelson Hall, a Business Process Outsourcing analyst firm, reported that 60 percent of recruitment process outsourcing buyers now describe providers as largely interchangeable. This commoditization threatens the RPO industry's survival. Additionally, due to other economic threats, the recruitment process outsourcing (RPO) market contracted 14 percent in 2024, following a five percent decline in 2023. Combating these threats requires RPO providers to become strategic business partners rather than transactional vendors.
At the 2025 Annual RPOA Conference, the premier industry conference for recruitment process outsourcing leaders and their industry partners, Alex Ridder explored how RPO providers can serve as catalysts for change. Ridder is Global Head of Client Partnerships at LHH, a global talent solutions company. This article explores balancing business renewal with people readiness in recruitment outsourcing. Ridder challenges RPOs to become workforce change partners and improve workforce development by redesigning incentive structures and measuring long-term candidate outcomes.
Three Strategic Takeaways for RPO Professionals and Buyers
- RPO strategic transformation demands moving beyond efficiency metrics. Workforce resilience outcomes connect hiring success with long-term employee development and organizational capability building.
- The catalyst model reframes RPO from filling today's roles. Skills signaling, guided career pathways and micro-credentialing increase employability beyond single positions.
- Market contraction reflects commoditization risk. Traditional differentiators became baseline expectations rather than competitive advantages.
Ridder reflected on the evolving role of recruitment process outsourcing and provided three possible paths:
Each of the three paths has its advantages and expected outcome.
Ridder described providers as transactional vendors responding to stated requirements. Providers focus on outputs, such as the number of CVs processed, rather than retention rates.
"The provider path keeps us efficient. The partner path makes us valuable. Only the catalyst path makes us indispensable to business and people." Alex Ridder, Global Head of Client Partnerships at LHH
The catalyst model in recruitment process outsourcing offers the following advantages:
"If we're incentivized to post jobs and wait two weeks before external hiring generates more revenue, we're not helping workforce transformation. We're blocking internal mobility." Alex Ridder, Global Head of Client Partnerships at LHH
Measuring candidate outcomes beyond time-to-fill requires deeper analysis. Ridder shared a Swiss bank case study demonstrating how manipulating recruiting metrics can yield desired (but false) outcomes. In this case, the process documentation showed that candidates underwent two interviews and that it took 43 days to fill a position. While qualitative research revealed that candidates experienced five to 10 interviews, averaging far longer cycles. Every leader has experienced more than three interviews for their position. The mean time-to-fill was 43 days, while the median was 28 days. To fix their numbers, recruiters canceled requisitions at 60 days. They reopened them with single candidates to achieve eight-day closures. This rigged system rewarded recruiters with performance bonuses while collapsing the candidate experience.
Ridder described a pharmaceutical client who believed AI eliminates managers as knowledge sources. This shifts the managers’ role to motivation and guidance on career pathways. The span of control in this case expanded from seven to 30 employees. Managers who historically hired one person annually suddenly triple their hiring activities. Candidate assessment shifted from resume screening to capability evaluation. Furthermore, recruitment is integrated with manager coaching development programs. Measuring success is now through employee performance trajectories.
"AI solved the manager's knowledge function. Now, managers must encourage pathways and motivate talent. Recruitment process outsourcing must transform how we recruit to support that business change." - Alex Ridder, Global Head of Client Partnerships at LHH.
How can organizations measure the effectiveness of the transformational catalyst model of recruitment process outsourcing? Ridder suggested measuring five key outcomes:
LinkedIn’s 2025 Future of Recruiting report shows that employee retention ranks higher than candidate volume when it comes to recruitment outcomes.
The Recruitment Process Outsourcing industry faces a critical juncture. As traditional differentiators like efficiency become baseline expectations, the market contracts due to the risk of commoditization. RPO providers must choose between maintaining efficiency (Provider model), building value through operational integration (Partner model), or achieving indispensability through simultaneous business and people transformation (Catalyst model). By shifting focus from transactional outputs to long-term outcomes—such as skills gap bridging, mobility tracking, and retention optimization—the Catalyst model enables RPOs to become strategic workforce change partners, ensuring both business renewal and workforce readiness for the future.
“Without people, transformation fails. Without transformation, people stall.” -Alex Ridder
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