Work Decoded

Why some job seekers are spending thousands on reverse recruiters: ‘The old rules are gone,’ says one recruiter

The Price of Employment: When Job Seekers Pay to Get Hired

Ask anyone actively job hunting right now, and you'll likely hear the same refrain: landing work has never felt harder. Candidates report submitting dozens—or even hundreds—of applications with little to show for it. 

The numbers confirm the frustration. In 2025, the U.S. added just 116,000 jobs for the entire year, a sharp drop from the 1.46 million positions created in 2024. According to Greenhouse, the average job posting now draws 244 applications—more than double the volume seen in 2022. Economists describe the current climate as a "low hire, low fire" market, with some even labeling it a "hiring recession."


In response, a growing number of job seekers are turning to an unconventional solution: **reverse recruiting**.

 Flipping the Script on Hiring

Traditional recruiting works like this: companies pay firms to find qualified candidates. Reverse recruiting inverts that model—job seekers pay professionals to help them secure employment.


Services vary, but typically include:

- Identifying target roles and companies

- Customizing resumes and cover letters for each application

- Submitting applications on the candidate's behalf

- Following up with hiring teams via email or LinkedIn

- Coaching candidates through interview preparation


What reverse recruiters *don't* do: interview for you. Once you're in the room (virtual or otherwise), your performance is entirely up to you.


 "I Was Out of options."

For Knic Ebel, 50, of Charlotte, North Carolina, reverse recruiting felt like a last resort. After being laid off from an engineering role in late 2023, he spent nearly two years applying to jobs while working a part-time project gig that barely covered expenses. By summer 2025, with little progress to show, he discovered Reverse Recruiting Agency.


The agency's pricing model is typical of the industry: a $1,500 monthly retainer, plus a "success fee" of 10% of the candidate's first-year base salary once they're hired (with the first month's fee refunded upon placement).


Ebel partnered with agency founder Alex Shinkarovsky to rebuild his job search strategy—from defining target companies to crafting tailored application materials. Within a month, he had secured roughly a dozen interviews. Three weeks later, he held an offer.


> "After months of applying, you start to really question if there's a place left for you in this economy [and] this workforce," Ebel says. "Paying thousands was worth it because, without that investment, I could still be without a full-time job."


Today, Ebel holds a director-level position he describes as fulfilling and career-advancing.


 Why Now? A Perfect Storm of Market Forces

Shinkarovsky launched his agency in 2024 with three clients. To date, 45 have completed their program: 22 secured offers through their team's efforts, and six landed roles independently.


He attributes rising demand to a fundamental shift in how hiring works. "The old rules are gone. The system is different," he says. "It used to be that you could apply to 25 roles and get five interviews."


His team submits 50–100 human-crafted applications per week per client, plus targeted outreach to 5–10 contacts at each company to bypass automated screening systems.


Economists see reverse recruiting as a symptom of broader labor market weakness. Indeed's February 2026 jobs report showed a loss of 92,000 positions and unemployment rising to 4.4%. The average time to hire has stretched to 47 days as of late 2025—up from under 30 days in late 2022. Long-term unemployment is also climbing, with one in four job seekers now searching for six months or longer.


Sectors like tech, finance, and professional services have been hit hardest by economic headwinds and higher interest rates, notes Kory Kantenga, LinkedIn's head of economics for the Americas. Meanwhile, AI-powered application tools have made it easier than ever for candidates to mass-apply, creating bottlenecks for hiring teams and intensifying competition.


> "In this world of AI and increased technology, we are also reaching out to humans again to help us find jobs and to actually engage with someone that you can talk to," says Svenja Gudell, chief economist at Indeed Hiring Lab. "It's like me constantly pressing zero on the phone to talk to a representative."


The Equity Question and Other Risks

Critics raise valid concerns about reverse recruiting's broader implications.


**Accessibility and fairness:** "One of the concerns around reverse recruiting is that for those folks who can't afford it, they'll be less competitive in the job market, even if they have the skill set," Kantenga warns. Services costing hundreds or thousands of dollars may deepen existing inequities.


**Scams and misrepresentation:** Bonnie Dilber, senior manager of talent acquisition at Zapier, urges caution. Before signing with any service, she recommends:

- Seeking independent referrals

- Verifying industry-specific success records

- Checking reviews on Reddit, Trustpilot, or similar platforms

- Ensuring the recruiter won't misrepresent your background—which some employers could view as fraudulent


**No guarantees:** Paying for reverse recruiting doesn't guarantee interviews or offers. As Dilber notes, "It's hard to put a dollar amount on how much people should spend on their job search." Other investments—like a skilled resume writer or career coach—may deliver comparable value depending on your situation.

A Tool, Not a Magic Wand

Howard Pan, 35, of Washington, D.C., took a lower-cost approach. After a January layoff from Amazon Web Services, he paid $299 for ApplyAll, a service that submits up to 200 applications on a candidate's behalf. For Pan, the value lies in speed and discovery: the service surfaces opportunities he might miss and applies faster than he could manually.

> "I can get my name out there in front of other applicants," Pan says. But he cautions against over-reliance: "I would not use this service as the only method of job seeking." He treats it as one component of a broader strategy that includes LinkedIn networking, recruiter outreach, and in-person events.

Ebel agrees reverse recruiting isn't for everyone. He wouldn't recommend it to early-career professionals still exploring their path, or to anyone unclear about their target role. Similarly, Shinkarovsky notes that candidates already achieving a ~10% interview rate (one interview per ten applications) in the first months of their search likely don't need external help.

 The Bottom Line

Reverse recruiting reflects a labor market in flux—one where traditional job-search tactics feel less effective and candidates are willing to invest in human guidance amid algorithmic noise. 

But as Gudell and Kantenga both suggest, demand for these services may ease if hiring conditions improve. For now, though, in a "low hire, low fire" economy, some job seekers are deciding that paying for access isn't just an option—it's a necessity.

> "Like many trends, once people learn something, they tend to stick with it," Kantenga says. "But I expect as the job market improves, people will find opportunities, and they won't need to rely so much on expert recruiting."

Until then, the question isn't just *whether* to pay for help—but how much hope, and how much of your savings, you're willing to invest in the chance to be seen.

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