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 Outdated hiring systems can delay recruitment and reduce competitiveness.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 September 9, 2025
In every organization, hiring is framed as a win: The role is filled, the team feels complete, and leaders expect the business to run more smoothly. But the reality is that the hiring decision is only the starting line. The following three months are far more consequential than most organizations recognize. This 90-day window quietly determines whether your new hire becomes a long-term asset who delivers measurable return on investment, or whether they drift into disengagement, misalignment, or even an early exit. As someone who has spent decades helping companies strengthen their talent strategy, I can tell you that onboarding is not a formality. It is the bridge between potential and performance, and too many businesses leave that bridge unfinished. Why the First 90 Days Matter More Than You Think Research paints a clear picture. Most new employees need six to eight months to reach full productivity. Without an intentional onboarding process that timeline stretches and, in some cases, never recovers. Even more concerning, surveys consistently show that employees form a lasting impression of their employer within their first 90 days. That impression directly influences their engagement, likelihood to stay, and ultimately, how quickly they contribute at the expected level. From an ROI perspective, the stakes are high. The cost of replacing an employee who leaves within the first year can reach 30-50% of their annual salary. For leadership teams looking to optimize budgets, overlooking onboarding is not just a cultural misstep; it’s a financial one. What Onboarding Really Impacts Strong onboarding is not about handbooks or one-time orientation sessions. It directly affects three drivers of long-term ROI: 1. Role clarity. New hires who understand what success looks like in their first 30 days are significantly more likely to perform at a higher level by the end of their first year. Ambiguity, on the other hand, leads to hesitation, errors, and slower integration. 2. Connection. Employees don’t leave companies; they leave environments where they never felt they belonged. Early relationship-building with managers, mentors, and peers fosters engagement and commitment, which directly lowers the attrition risk. 3. Knowledge transfer. Every organization has unwritten rules, workflows, and context that can’t be captured in a job description. Without a structured approach, that knowledge takes months to absorb, which equates to valuable time when productivity stalls. When these elements are missing, leaders may misinterpret poor performance as a hiring mistake. In truth, it is often a process mistake. How to Shorten the Ramp-Up Curve Effective onboarding aims not to rush new hires but to shorten the time between arrival and meaningful contribution. Practical, evidence-based steps make this possible: Start before day one. Pre-boarding, sharing culture insights, role expectations, and simple administrative tools before the official start date, reduces first-week overwhelm and allows employees to arrive ready to engage. Define 30/60/90-day milestones. General orientation doesn’t provide direction. Clear, staged goals help new hires measure progress and give managers a framework to assess development in real time. Assign a peer or mentor. Formal mentorship or buddy programs accelerate learning by providing safe channels for questions and reducing uncertainty. This is particularly valuable in hybrid or remote settings where informal hallway conversations don’t exist. Invest in manager check-ins. A new hire’s manager is the most critical factor in retention. Structured weekly or bi-weekly conversations in the first three months surface misalignments early and reinforce expectations before they drift. Enable with the right tools. Access to knowledge management systems, project platforms, and communication channels ensures new employees aren’t left to navigate fragmented information. Technology can be a critical equalizer in reducing ramp-up time. What Leaders Should Ask Themselves I often advise executives to pause and evaluate their onboarding process with a straightforward lens: If I joined this organization tomorrow, how quickly would I understand how to succeed? Would I know exactly what is expected of me in my first 30, 60, and 90 days? Would I feel connected to the team and confident in where to go for support? Would I have the tools and knowledge needed to perform, or would I spend weeks piecing things together on my own? If the honest answer to these questions is “NO,” then the organization is not only slowing productivity but also quietly eroding the ROI of every new hire. Making the First 90 Days Count The 90-day window is not a grace period. It is the most critical stage in the employee lifecycle. Done well, onboarding builds trust, accelerates contribution, and maximizes the long-term value of your investment in talent. Done poorly, it prolongs ramp-up time, drains resources, and often results in preventable turnover. Leaders who recognize this shift their focus from filling seats to building momentum. That perspective benefits new employees and strengthens the entire organization. If you’re ready to rethink how your organization approaches the first three months, let’s talk.
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By Evelyn Judge August 26, 2025
When business leaders think about risk, their minds usually jump to financial audits, cybersecurity, or supply chain disruptions. Rarely does HR make the list of high-risk areas. But the truth is, one outdated job posting, one poorly documented termination, or one misstep in an interview can expose your company to serious legal and financial consequences. That’s where Employment Practices Liability Insurance (EPLI) comes in, the insurance policy you didn’t know you needed. The Hidden Liabilities in HR Practices Most executives don’t realize how costly small HR compliance mistakes can be: Job descriptions that discriminate. Writing “3-5 years of experience” sounds harmless, but it’s legally problematic. That wording could be considered exclusionary to candidates with more or fewer years of experience. The compliant version? “3+ years.” Interview questions you can’t ask. Anything that touches on age, gender, family status, or medical conditions is off-limits. Yet I still see hiring managers making these mistakes. Data retention risks. What employee information you keep, where you store it, and how long you hold it matter. Mishandling personal data creates exposure. Weak documentation. Terminations, performance reviews, and disciplinary actions all need proper documentation. Without it, companies are wide open to wrongful termination claims. These aren’t isolated issues. They’re patterns I see repeatedly when auditing HR practices. And in today’s environment, one small misstep can trigger a lawsuit that drains time, money, and reputation. What EPLI Covers and Why You Can’t Ignore It EPLI protects companies against claims from employees, former employees, or even job applicants. Coverage typically includes: Wrongful termination Discrimination (age, sex, disability, etc.) Sexual harassment Retaliation claims Mismanagement of employee data or records Without coverage, even defending against a frivolous claim can cost six figures. With coverage, the financial hit is managed, but here’s the reality: insurance doesn’t stop the claim from happening. It just pays for the mess after the fact. That’s why EPLI and HR compliance go hand in hand. Compliance Is Prevention Think of HR compliance as the seatbelt and EPLI as the airbag. Both protect you, but in very different ways. Compliance reduces your risk of ever needing the policy. By aligning your hiring, interviewing, and documentation practices with the law, you close the gaps that cause most lawsuits. EPLI is the back-up. It’s there if, despite your best efforts, something slips through. In my work, I help companies audit their HR practices and identify the blind spots leaders often miss. For example: Updating outdated job postings and hiring protocols Training managers on what they can and can’t ask in interviews Setting up compliant documentation and record-keeping processes The result? A lower chance of being sued, lower insurance premiums, and often significant cost savings. I routinely save companies 30–40% on their hiring and HR costs while helping them avoid liabilities they didn’t even know existed. Why Business Leaders Should Care Leaders are often surprised when I say this: HR compliance isn’t about being “politically correct.” It’s about protecting your business. It protects your budget. Legal fees and settlements are one of the fastest ways to erode profitability. It protects your people. Transparent, compliant processes build trust and credibility with employees. It protects your leadership. As a CEO, CFO, or HR leader, you’re responsible for the practices under your roof, even if you weren’t aware of them. Ignoring compliance is like driving without insurance. You might be fine until you’re not. EPLI Is Only Half the Story  EPLI is the insurance policy you didn’t know you needed. However, it works best when paired with strong HR compliance practices that keep you out of the courtroom in the first place. If you’re unsure whether your hiring, interviewing, and documentation practices are compliant or want to understand how EPLI fits into your risk management strategy, now is the time to take a closer look. Protect your business before you need protection. Let’s talk.