Retention is one of those topics everyone talks about, but no one fully wants to own.
When someone leaves a role early, the finger-pointing usually starts quietly:
- The hire “wasn’t right”
- The recruiter “oversold it”
- The business “didn’t support them”
- The individual “wasn’t what we thought”
And while all of those can be true in certain situations, they often avoid the harder question:
Who is actually responsible for retention?
The honest answer is… it depends. But it’s never just one party.
Recruitment Doesn’t End at Offer Acceptance
In a genuinely strong recruiter–client relationship, the recruiter isn’t just there to fill a vacancy and disappear.
When the relationship works properly, the recruiter acts as an extension of the business. They understand the culture, the expectations, the reality of the role, and what success actually looks like beyond the job description.
In that scenario, recruiters should take some responsibility for how well someone does.
That includes:
- Making sure the role is sold accurately, not optimistically
- Ensuring the candidate understands the challenges, not just the upside
- Pressure-testing motivations before an offer is accepted
- Staying close during the early stages of a placement
Retention absolutely starts before day one.
But Here’s the Bit That’s Hard to Hear
Even with the best intentions, recruiters are not inside your business.
They don’t sit next to the new hire every day.
They don’t control how a manager shows up.
They don’t run onboarding.
They don’t shape the day-one experience.
Most recruiters will run check-in calls at key points. Week one. Month one. Month three. They’ll ask how things are going, listen for red flags, and feed back where necessary.
But between those calls, that person is working for you.
And that’s where the balance of responsibility shifts.
Onboarding Is Not a “Nice to Have”
One of the biggest causes of early attrition has nothing to do with capability.
It’s experience.
How someone feels in the first few weeks sets the tone for everything that follows. If day one is chaotic, unclear, or underwhelming, it creates doubt that’s hard to undo.
Questions start forming quietly:
- Did I make the right decision?
- Is this what I was sold?
- Does anyone actually care that I’m here?
A recruiter can guide on onboarding. They can share best practice. They can flag what’s worked elsewhere.
But they can’t action it for you.
If onboarding is rushed, inconsistent, or treated as an afterthought, no amount of great recruitment will fix that.
Retention Lives in the Gaps Recruiters Can’t See
This is where things get real.
Retention is shaped by:
- The quality of day-to-day management
- Clarity of expectations
- Feedback (or lack of it)
- How mistakes are handled
- Whether people feel safe asking questions
- Whether development is talked about, not just promised
These are lived experiences. And they happen long after the recruiter has done their part.
A recruiter might spot warning signs if someone speaks up on a check-in call. But many people don’t. They stay polite. They stay vague. They don’t want to rock the boat.
By the time the resignation comes, it can feel sudden. Often, it wasn’t.
Shared Responsibility Only Works If It’s Actually Shared
The idea that retention is “everyone’s responsibility” sounds nice, but it only works if everyone understands their role in it.
Recruiters are responsible for:
- Honest representation of roles and businesses
- Challenging clients when something doesn’t stack up
- Challenging candidates when motivations feel misaligned
- Staying engaged post-placement and flagging issues early
Employers are responsible for:
- Delivering the experience that was sold
- Investing time in onboarding and early support
- Equipping managers to manage, not just delegate
- Creating clarity, structure, and psychological safety
One can’t compensate for the absence of the other.
Retention Isn’t a Handover. It’s a Partnership.
The strongest outcomes happen when recruitment isn’t treated as a transaction, but as a partnership.
When recruiters are invited into honest conversations about challenges, pressure points, and realities, they can place people who are genuinely aligned.
When employers take ownership of what happens after day one, those hires actually stand a chance of thriving.
Retention doesn’t fail because one side didn’t care.
It fails when responsibility is assumed rather than agreed.
Final Thought
Recruiters can open the door.
They can guide the journey.
They can stay close and support.
But they can’t walk the floor for you.
If retention matters, it has to be owned where the experience lives. Day in. Day out.
Because people don’t leave jobs on paper.
They leave experiences.