JobElephant

In Conversation with Michael Ang

In Conversation with Michael Ang is the CEO and founder of JobElephant

What is the most overlooked metric in recruitment, and why does it matter?

Michael Ang:

The most overlooked metric in recruiting is not time-to-fill or even cost-per-hire. It is source quality and source accuracy. Most organizations still cannot reliably tell you where their best candidates actually came from, and that creates a massive blind spot in hiring strategy and especially spend.

The fact that nearly every application still asks, “How did you hear about this job?” tells you everything you need to know. That question is a relic from the newspaper advertising era, yet it survives because most recruiting systems still struggle with true attribution. Over 50% of the applicants select a source that is not accurate. The result is that HR teams are often making budget decisions using incomplete or inaccurate data.

Clicks are easy to measure. Applications are measurable. But what actually matters is which sources consistently produce qualified applicants who interview well, get hired, perform and stay. Too many organizations optimize for volume because volume is visible, while quality is much harder to track.

The fix is straightforward, but it requires discipline. Treat every source as an investment, not a line item. Measure application starts, completed applications, qualified candidates, interviews and hires by source. Then compare those outcomes against actual spend.

Once organizations start looking at recruiting through that lens, the data becomes very revealing very quickly. Some sources that appear “expensive” produce exceptional hires. Others generate lots of activity but very little value. Without accurate source tracking, companies often continue funding channels that create noise instead of results.

Source of hire is not just another reporting metric. It is one of the foundational inputs for making smarter recruiting, marketing and workforce decisions.

When budgets get cut, recruitment advertising is often the first thing to go. What is wrong with that approach?

Michael Ang:

Cutting recruitment advertising under budget pressure is like turning off the lights to save money and then wondering why no one can find the door. The candidates you need do not disappear just because your budget did.

What many HR leaders miss is that reducing advertising does not reduce reach evenly. It reduces visibility selectively. Active job seekers on the major platforms may still find you. But many of the most valuable candidates, including faculty researchers, public health leaders, specialized engineers and other hard-to-reach professionals, are not spending their days scrolling large generic job boards. They follow niche publications, industry associations and specialized communities tied directly to their profession. The moment an organization cuts those channels, it often disappears from that talent market entirely.

The smarter approach is to audit before you cut. Identify which channels consistently produce qualified applicants, strong interviews and actual hires, then protect those investments first. High-traffic platforms with low conversion rates are often better candidates for reduction than highly targeted niche sources with smaller but far more relevant audiences.

Organizations that treat recruitment advertising as a measurable performance investment instead of overhead make better decisions under pressure. More importantly, they maintain access to the talent pools that matter most while competitors quietly disappear from view.

What do mission-driven organizations consistently get wrong about recruitment advertising?

Michael Ang:

Mission-driven organizations often make the mistake of treating recruitment advertising as an expense instead of an investment, and that mindset changes everything downstream.

These organizations usually have a real advantage because purpose matters. Strong missions attract attention and create emotional connection with candidates. But many HR teams mistakenly assume the mission alone is enough to carry the recruiting effort. They post jobs on a few large general platforms and expect the right people to find them. Then they are surprised when the applicant pool feels shallow, misaligned or lacks the diversity and specialization they hoped to attract.

The mission creates interest. The strategy determines who actually applies.

Every search is its own marketing campaign with a specific audience. A faculty role in marine biology requires a completely different outreach strategy than a nursing position, a public health leader or a public policy director. Different audiences consume information in different places, trust different sources and engage with different communities.

The organizations that consistently outperform are the ones that approach recruiting with precision. They define the target audience, identify the right distribution channels, measure performance and adjust based on outcomes instead of assumptions.

Mission is powerful. But mission without strategy is rarely enough to consistently produce the hiring outcomes organizations expect.

If you could describe the current mood of the workforce in 2026 using just one word, what would it be? Why?

Michael Ang:

“Cautious.”

That word captures what we see in real-time job ad data every single day. Across higher education, nonprofits and public agencies, the sectors we serve, hiring activity has not rebounded the way many predicted. In 2025, roughly one in eight of our clients posted no new roles at all. That is not a pause. That is a freeze. The last time we saw that level of decline was 2009, during the Great Recession.

The signals driving that caution are structural, not emotional. Policy uncertainty slows budget approvals. Grant delays stall research hiring. Tariff swings make workforce planning feel like a moving target. Even employers who want to hire are waiting for clearer signals before they commit. Optimism is healthy, but it has to match the operating environment. Right now, the data points to “wait and see,” not “go.”

We talk a lot about “gut feeling” in hiring. How are you using data to challenge your own biases, or the biases of hiring managers, when it comes to hiring, retaining, or promoting underrepresented talent?

Michael Ang:

Gut feeling is a luxury that underrepresented candidates cannot afford. When hiring managers rely on instinct, they tend to hire people who look and sound like them. Data is the antidote to that pattern.

At JobElephant, we use applicant tracking system integrations to evaluate how targeted, niche job boards perform compared with generic platforms, so hiring decisions rely on reach and results rather than assumptions. Our analysis of 439,599 job postings across 370 publications showed that ads placed in specialized publications generated 4.3 million impressions and 2.8 million clicks in 2024. Those numbers tell you exactly where your message lands and who is paying attention.

The business case for inclusive hiring is equally data-driven. Companies that build inclusive workforces report 19% higher innovation revenues and are 35% more likely to outperform their competitors. That is not a talking point. That is a competitive advantage hiding in plain sight. When hiring managers push back on broadening their candidate reach, the numbers move the conversation forward. Feelings fade. Data sticks.

What is the biggest myth about working in HR that you wish would die?

Michael Ang:

That posting a job means candidates will come. They will not. Not automatically, and not the right ones.

After 25 years of working alongside HR teams, the single most expensive assumption I see is that a job listing on a major platform is a hiring strategy. It is not. It is a starting point at best. The real work is understanding which channels reach the specific talent you need, how your message performs in real time, and what the data shows about where qualified candidates are actually coming from.

HR professionals deal with disconnected technology. Job boards and applicant tracking systems operate in silos, which means critical data falls through gaps. Organizations end up making hiring decisions based on incomplete or unreliable information, and they do not know why the right candidates are not applying. The question “How did you hear about this job?” remains standard in 2026 only because modern systems still cannot reliably track where candidates originate. That is a technology failure masquerading as a process.

The myth that posting equals hiring costs organizations time, money and top talent every day. The sooner HR leaders treat recruitment advertising as a living, data-driven campaign rather than a checkbox, the better their results will be.

What is one task AI will never be able to replace in your people strategy?

Michael Ang:

Trust. AI cannot build it, and it cannot repair it when it breaks.

Every interaction a candidate has with your organization creates an impression, from the first job posting they read to the final offer conversation. AI can optimize the language in that posting, predict which platform delivers the best reach, and score resumes with more consistency than a human reviewer. What it cannot do is make a candidate feel seen, heard and genuinely valued as a person.

The most telling moment in any hiring process is rejection. A candidate who receives a thoughtful, human response after being passed over can still walk away as a brand advocate, a future applicant or a referral source. A candidate who receives an automated form letter walks away with a story to tell. That story lives on Glassdoor, in professional networks and in every conversation they have about your organization going forward. No algorithm manages that outcome.

At JobElephant, we built our technology to handle the analytical heavy lifting, so our people have more time to focus on the relationships that data cannot build. That balance is not a feature. It is the strategy.

Michael Ang is the CEO and founder of JobElephant, a recruitment advertising technology company serving higher education, government, health care and nonprofits. Michael Ang launched JobElephant in 2000 and scaled it nationally by pairing proprietary ad tech with high-touch service. Michael Ang focuses on simplifying hiring through smarter job distribution, predictive recommendations and clear performance reporting, so HR teams can see what works and move budget accordingly. Michael Ang still works directly with accounts to ensure every campaign delivers measurable results.

 

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Bridging Technology Gaps in Modern Talent Acquisition

Bridging Technology Gaps in Modern Talent Acquisition

By Michael Ang, CEO and Founder of JobElephant

In today’s talent acquisition landscape, HR professionals face a significant challenge that often gets overlooked: the fragmentation of recruitment technology. Job boards operate independently from applicant tracking systems (ATS), creating inefficiencies that cost organizations time, money, and top candidates. The critical need for integration between these platforms has never been more apparent as HR teams struggle to maintain data integrity across disconnected systems.

The current recruitment technology setup may feel like a bunch of islands rather than a connected continent. Job boards and ATS platforms operate in silos, each with its own interfaces, data structures, and communication protocols. This isolation is not accidental. Competing talent acquisition vendors often create barriers to protect their market share, even when it hurts the end users. The persistence of questions like “How did you hear about this job?” reveals this disconnect. Such questions became standard in the print advertising era but remain necessary today only because modern systems still can’t reliably track where candidates come from, a problem that proper integration would solve.

The real costs of these disconnected systems go beyond just being inconvenient. HR teams waste countless hours manually transferring data between platforms, increasing the likelihood of errors. Organizations lose money on ineffective advertising placements without comprehensive performance data. Most critically, qualified candidates fall through the cracks when their information fails to transfer properly between systems.

The Fragmentation Problem in Talent Acquisition

Data loss between recruitment systems creates ripple effects throughout the hiring process. When candidate information does not seamlessly flow between platforms, recruiters miss opportunities to engage with promising applicants. This fragmentation leads to inconsistent candidate experiences, as applicants encounter different interfaces and requirements across various touchpoints in the application journey.

Tracking candidates across multiple platforms becomes a logistical nightmare for HR teams. Without a unified view, recruiters struggle to determine where candidates are in the hiring process, leading to delays and miscommunications. The fragmentation also severely impacts reporting and analytics capabilities, making it nearly impossible to gain comprehensive insights into recruitment performance. With job seeker-provided information and without a standardized way to measure recruitment advertising success across all platforms, the Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) become meaningless. Organizations end up making critical hiring decisions based on incomplete or unreliable data.

Communication Breakdowns in the Hiring Process

Neutral intermediaries add significant value to the talent acquisition ecosystem by bridging communication gaps between competing vendors. Advertising agencies with specialized technology can serve as translators between job boards and ATS platforms, ensuring data flows smoothly throughout the recruitment process.

While technology plays a crucial role in bridging recruitment gaps, the human element remains essential. Expertise in navigating complex technology ecosystems helps organizations make the most of their recruitment tools. Strategic partnerships with third-party specialists provide access to this knowledge without requiring internal teams to become technology experts.

This independence allows for objective comparisons between different platforms and strategies, helping HR teams make informed decisions. Having an unbiased partner in recruitment technology ensures that recommendations are based on performance rather than platform preferences.

Customization through robust Application Programming Interface (API) capabilities allows organizations to tailor their recruitment technology to their specific needs. By leveraging data resources across platforms, these partnerships enable more informed decision-making and strategy development. Ultimately, third-party partners improve hiring outcomes by combining technological solutions with human insight and industry knowledge.

The Value of Strategic Partnerships and Independent Third Parties

Data protection has become a critical concern in recruitment processes, with candidates and organizations alike demanding greater security measures. Fragmented systems create security vulnerabilities as sensitive information passes through multiple platforms with varying levels of protection. Each transfer point represents a potential risk for data breaches or unauthorized access. Many HR professionals now question whether vendors might share their candidates with competitors, either directly or through third-party AI firms, adding another layer of concern to an already complex security landscape.

Building trust through transparent data handling practices requires a cohesive approach to information security. Organizations need consistent protocols that protect data regardless of which platforms are involved in the process. This unified approach to security helps build candidate trust and protects sensitive organizational information.

Information Security and Trust in Talent Acquisition

Integrated recruitment systems connect organizations to worldwide job distribution networks, expanding their reach beyond local or national boundaries. This global approach allows employers to tap into diverse talent pools and find specialized skills that may not be available in their immediate area. A growing cottage industry of middleware Human Resources Information System (HRIS) connectors has emerged to bridge these gaps, though these services come with a cost. Some providers offer more hands-on support than others, with many now bundling connections to background checkers, schedulers, payroll systems and other services to reduce the number of vendors organizations must manage.

Through a single interface, organizations can access niche platforms that cater to specific industries or skill sets. Performance tracking across all connected systems provides insights into which channels are most effective for different types of positions, enabling more strategic allocation of recruitment resources. Real-time monitoring of ad performance, clicks, and conversions helps organizations adjust their strategies quickly to maximize results.

Global Reach Through Integrated Systems

The future of talent acquisition depends on interconnectivity between previously isolated systems. Organizations that successfully bridge technology gaps gain significant advantages in efficiency, candidate quality, and hiring speed. As recruitment technology continues to evolve, the focus must shift from building individual platforms to creating ecosystems where different tools work together seamlessly.

The most successful recruitment strategies will leverage both technological innovation and human expertise. Data-driven insights from integrated systems empower recruiters to make better decisions, while strategic partnerships provide the guidance needed to maximize the value of these technological investments. Together, these elements create a recruitment ecosystem that is greater than the sum of its parts.

The Future of Connected Recruitment

About the Author

Michael Ang, CEO and Founder of JobElephant leverages over two decades of recruitment advertising expertise. Starting as a graphic designer in 1994, he established JobElephant in 2000, propelling it from his garage to national recognition. Michael’s visionary leadership emphasizes outstanding service, personally managing numerous client accounts. His focus on streamlining recruitment advertising processes has solidified JobElephant’s reputation for reliability and success. Michael’s insights and commitment to excellence distinguish JobElephant as an industry leader.

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