Your Hiring Process May Be Losing Your Best Candidates. Here’s How to Take Control of Your Hiring Process

Evelyn Judge • September 23, 2025

[Atlanta, GA] — [09/20/2025] - Artificial intelligence has become central to modern hiring, automatically screening, ranking, and even rejecting resumes before a human sees them. While this technology can streamline recruitment, it also carries hidden risks: Qualified candidates may be filtered out for minor reasons, and companies may lose the talent they need without realizing it.

“Algorithms are making decisions that can profoundly affect the quality of your hires,” says Evelyn Judge, managing partner and executive-level HR consultant at Frank Rally Post. “If you haven’t examined how AI influences your hiring process, you may be missing key candidates, while your competitors quietly bring them onto their teams.”


Judge works directly with startups and growing companies to audit hiring processes, align them with business goals, and ensure AI supports your recruitment strategy. 


Her approach focuses on clarity, compliance, culture, and leadership enablement, helping organizations efficiently attract and retain the right talent.


The Reality for Companies Today


  • Strong candidates are slipping through the cracks. AI filters can unintentionally exclude high-performing or unconventional talent.
  • Process gaps create risk. Outdated hiring systems can delay recruitment and reduce competitiveness.
  • Your employer brand matters. Candidates notice clunky processes and may take their skills elsewhere.


A mismanaged hiring process directly impacts business performance,” Judge says. “Even a small flaw in the system can prevent the right candidate from joining your team at the right time.”


How Evelyn Can Help

Evelyn’s services are designed to integrate directly with an organization:


  • Fractional HR Consulting: Executive-level HR support without full-time overhead, including strategic people planning, compliance, and culture development.
  • Talent Acquisition Strategy: Define the roles you truly need, optimize employer branding, and streamline hiring processes.


Talent Development Advisory: Develop top performers, establish succession planning, and embed feedback systems that improve retention.


Take Action Today

Every day your best candidates are filtered out is a day your competitors move ahead. Schedule a confidential consultation with Evelyn Judge to audit your hiring process, uncover hidden gaps, and implement strategies that ensure the right talent reaches your team.


Reserve your session today at www.frankrallypost.com/contact 

Or call (203) 820-1720 and let’s talk.


About Frank Rally Post


Frank Rally Post is a specialized Human Capital Organization serving a nationwide client base with offices in Atlanta, GA, New York, NY, and Stamford, CT. We provide retained HR, Talent Acquisition, and Recruitment Services designed for small to mid-sized companies.


Our expertise spans direct hire and executive search in the Accounting, Finance, and HR sectors. We deliver access to top-tier talent without upfront costs through a relationship-centric, contingency-based approach.


By quickly assessing organizational needs and implementing effective processes, we empower business leaders to focus on growth while we manage HR complexities with precision. Frank Rally Post is committed to helping clients turn HR challenges into opportunities, positioning their businesses for sustainable success.



Media Contact

Evelyn Judge

FRANK RALLY POST

Email: evelyn@frankrallypost.com

Phone: 203-820-1720

Website: www.frankrallypost.com





By Evelyn Judge November 20, 2025
Evelyn Judge here. In my years working with growing companies to help them maneuver through the often-complex world of HR and talent acquisition, one observation repeatedly surfaces. It’s about a very common, often unquestioned, phrase in nearly every job description: "X years of experience required." We’ve all written it, read it, and based significant decisions on it. It seems straightforward enough, a simple way to convey a role’s seniority and filter a pool of applicants. But if we’re being entirely frank, this long-held tradition frequently creates more obstacles and missed opportunities than it resolves for a thriving, expanding business. Consider for a moment the talent we might be inadvertently overlooking. When a job description specifies "3-5 years of experience," what message does that truly send? An accomplished professional with seven or eight years under their belt might quickly dismiss the opening by assuming it’s beneath their capabilities or that the company isn't seeking their level of strategic contribution. Consequently, a leader who can bring immediate impact, mentor others, or navigate complex challenges effortlessly will simply move past your opportunity. Conversely, think of the individual who, through sheer drive, accelerated learning, or intense project exposure, has gained profound capabilities in two years that others take five or six to acquire. A rigid "minimum of three years" requirement effectively closes that door. We’re not just potentially overlooking raw ability; we're often prioritizing a calendar count over demonstrated skill and valuable perspective. It’s not simply about time served; it’s about what a candidate has mastered, the challenges they've overcome, and the tangible results they can deliver. Then there’s the operational reality of compliance – an area few companies consider until it becomes, well, a compliance issue. While needing a level of experience is perfectly sensible, relying on an overly prescriptive, numerical range can sometimes, unintentionally, invite questions concerning age discrimination or other biases down the line. For any growing company, proactively managing these subtleties is simply good, pragmatic business. It’s about building a robust foundation that allows you to focus squarely on growth, free from avoidable legal entanglements. Ultimately, a narrow focus on numerical "years of experience" can restrict access to a broader talent pool, allow a calendar to overshadow genuine capability, and introduce unnecessary risk. It's a practice inherited from a different era of hiring that often fails to serve the agility and specific needs of today's ambitious companies. My team and I, when we partner with leaders, delve deeper. We ask: What problem does this role truly address? What specific contributions must it make? What core skills and achievements are non-negotiable? If a certain amount of experience is genuinely critical, we articulate it clearly: "X+ years of demonstrated proficiency in [specific area]." This sets a necessary floor without erecting an invisible ceiling that could deter invaluable expertise. We aim to articulate the true challenge and opportunity to attract individuals driven by impact rather than a generic checklist. It boils down to intelligently designing your talent gateway. Ensure it clearly invites the right people in, rather than unintentionally diverting them elsewhere.
By Evelyn Judge October 27, 2025
In boardrooms and offices across the country, leaders wrestle with the same question: “How do we attract the right people without breaking the budget?” It’s tempting to assume that higher salaries are the answer. But experience shows that money alone rarely wins the loyalty, engagement, and performance that truly make an organization thrive. The real differentiator lies in the Total Value Proposition (TVP), the way culture, flexibility, benefits, and growth opportunities come together to create a workplace that people want to join and stay with. Each element tells a story about what the organization values, how it invests in its people, and the kind of experience it delivers day to day. Consider culture as the sum of interactions, decisions, and behaviors that define how work gets done. Teams that operate with transparency, accountability, and mutual respect naturally inspire a sense of commitment. Employees understand that their contributions have an impact, and that understanding keeps them engaged even when competitors offer higher pay. Flexibility reinforces that trust. Giving people the autonomy to manage schedules or work arrangements that fit their lives shows respect for them as whole individuals. This trust creates ownership and focus, and it signals that the organization measures results, not just hours at a desk. Flexibility is a strategic tool that strengthens loyalty and performance while keeping compensation manageable. Benefits further shape the employee experience. Thoughtful programs, supporting wellness, skill development, paid time off, insurance, or life balance, communicate that the organization invests in its people beyond the role itself. They demonstrate that the company views employees as partners, not just resources by fostering engagement and retention in ways that money alone cannot buy. Growth opportunities complete the picture. When employees know they have a clear path to advancement, their ambition is recognized and nurtured, and they can take on more responsibility. Over time, they commit more deeply. Investing in internal development reduces reliance on external hires, keeps knowledge within the organization, and builds a workforce capable of navigating future challenges. Crafting a Total Value Proposition is about more than adding perks. It is a deliberate choice about how an organization demonstrates what it values most, how it engages its people, and how it sustains performance over time. Leaders who get this right attract the talent they need, retain high performers, and build a resilient, capable workforce, without resorting to unsustainable salary increases. Take a step back and look at your Total Value Proposition. How do culture, flexibility, benefits, and growth combine to shape the experience of working in your organization? A thoughtful, intentional approach will help you attract and retain top talent while keeping your workforce engaged, resilient, and aligned for long-term success. Let’s talk.