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Why You’re Losing Great Finance Candidates Before You Even Make an Offer

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You’ve found the perfect candidate.

Their experience matches the brief. The interviews have gone well. The hiring manager is impressed. The team can already picture them in the role.

Then the email arrives. “Thanks for the opportunity, but I’ve accepted another position.”

Sound familiar?

Many businesses assume they’re losing candidates because another employer offered a higher salary. Sometimes that’s true. But more often, the reason is much simpler.

Your hiring process lost them long before the offer stage.

In today’s finance recruitment market, great candidates don’t just assess the role. They assess your business. Every conversation, every delay and every decision shapes their opinion of what it’s like to work for you.

And if the experience feels slow, disorganised or uncertain, they’ll often move on before you even have the chance to make an offer.

The Best Finance Candidates Don’t Wait Around

One of the biggest misconceptions in recruitment is that candidates are waiting patiently for your decision.

They’re not.

The strongest finance professionals are often involved in several recruitment processes at the same time. While you’re arranging a third interview or waiting for sign-off from another stakeholder, another employer may already be discussing start dates.

According to the 2025 Hays UK Salary & Recruiting Trends Guide, employers continue to report significant skills shortages across qualified finance and accountancy roles. Similarly, Robert Half’s Salary Guide highlights that businesses are competing for a relatively small pool of experienced finance professionals, particularly in commercial finance, FP&A, financial control and leadership positions.

When demand exceeds supply, candidates don’t stay available for long.

Every Delay Sends a Message

Hiring managers often view delays as unavoidable. A diary conflict. A stakeholder on annual leave. Waiting for approval from HR. To a candidate, those same delays tell a different story.

They can suggest:

  • The business isn’t aligned.
  • The role isn’t really a priority.
  • Decision-making is slow.
  • Nobody is taking ownership of the process.

Whether those assumptions are true is almost irrelevant. They’re often enough for candidates to lose confidence.

Candidate experience research from LinkedIn Talent Solutions consistently shows that recruitment processes influence whether candidates ultimately accept or reject job offers. Slow communication and lengthy hiring processes remain two of the biggest frustrations reported by job seekers.

The irony? Most businesses aren’t losing candidates because they made the wrong decision. They’re losing them because they took too long to make any decision.

Too Many Interviews Create Too Much Friction

Thorough recruitment is important. Unnecessary recruitment isn’t.

We’ve seen finance recruitment processes involving:

  • Five interview stages
  • Multiple competency interviews covering the same topics
  • Repeated presentations
  • Separate meetings with every senior stakeholder

The intention is usually to reduce hiring risk. Instead, it often creates candidate frustration.

Experienced finance professionals already have busy careers. Taking repeated annual leave, travelling to multiple interviews and answering the same questions over several weeks quickly becomes exhausting.

A streamlined process demonstrates confidence. An overcomplicated process can suggest indecision. Ask yourself this:

Does every interview stage genuinely add value?

Or has the process simply grown over time because “that’s how we’ve always done it”?

Compensation Conversations Start Too Late

One of the most avoidable reasons businesses lose candidates is waiting until the final stage to discuss salary.

After several weeks of interviews, both sides have invested significant time. Only then does someone discover expectations are £10,000 apart. By that stage, everyone loses. Candidates feel their time has been wasted. Hiring managers feel frustrated. The recruitment process starts again.

That’s exactly why salary benchmarking should happen before recruitment begins.

Using We Do Benchmark allows employers to compare salaries, benefits and total reward packages against current finance market data before making offers.

As we discussed in What a £5k Salary Misjudgement Really Costs You in Finance Recruitment, what appears to be a salary saving can quickly become a far more expensive recruitment problem.

Candidates Are Assessing You Too

Recruitment is no longer one-sided. Candidates aren’t just trying to impress employers. Employers are being assessed too. Finance professionals notice things such as:

  • How quickly you communicate.
  • Whether interviewers are prepared.
  • If everyone tells the same story.
  • Whether the role matches the original advert.
  • How organised the overall process feels.

According to LinkedIn Talent Solutions, 75% of job seekers consider an employer’s brand before even applying for a role. Every interaction contributes to your reputation.

Even candidates who reject your offer will remember how they were treated. And they’ll probably tell other finance professionals too.

Silence Creates Doubt

One of the quickest ways to lose momentum is poor communication. Candidates don’t expect daily updates. They do expect clarity. If someone has completed an interview and hears nothing for ten days, they’ll naturally assume one of three things:

  • They haven’t been successful.
  • The business isn’t interested.
  • The process isn’t being managed effectively.

None of those assumptions build confidence. Even a short update explaining that decisions are taking longer than expected keeps candidates engaged. Communication isn’t just good manners. It’s part of your recruitment strategy.

The CIPD Recruitment Factsheet highlights that candidate communication and employer reputation play a significant role in attracting and retaining talent.

Counter Offers Become More Likely

The longer a recruitment process lasts, the greater the chance your preferred candidate receives another offer, or a counter offer from their current employer. This is particularly common within finance.

By the time you’re arranging another interview, someone else may already have:

  • Made an offer.
  • Increased their salary.
  • Promised promotion.
  • Improved flexible working arrangements.

The longer candidates remain in the market, the more opportunities appear. The best way to avoid counter-offer situations? Move before they happen.

Good Candidates Don’t Stay Available for Long

There’s a reason specialist finance recruiters often encourage clients to move quickly. The strongest candidates rarely stay on the market. Not because they’re desperate. Because they’re in demand. Whether you’re hiring:

  • Financial Controllers
  • Finance Managers
  • Finance Business Partners
  • FP&A professionals
  • Qualified accountants
  • Finance Directors
  • CFOs

You’re unlikely to be the only organisation speaking to them.

The Recruitment & Employment Confederation (REC) continues to report ongoing shortages across professional occupations, with employers facing increasing competition for experienced talent. By the time internal approvals are complete, someone else may already have secured your preferred candidate.

Speed Doesn’t Mean Rushing

Moving quickly doesn’t mean lowering standards. It means removing unnecessary barriers. The strongest hiring processes are usually the simplest. That means:

  • Agreeing interview stages before recruitment begins.
  • Aligning decision-makers early.
  • Benchmarking salary expectations upfront.
  • Providing clear timelines.
  • Giving prompt feedback after every stage.
  • Making decisions while momentum is still high.

Candidates don’t expect perfection. They expect professionalism.

Why Specialist Finance Recruiters Make the Difference

A specialist finance recruiter doesn’t simply introduce candidates. They keep the process moving.

At We Do Group, we spend as much time helping clients improve hiring processes as we do finding finance professionals. Sometimes that means advising on salary expectations. Sometimes it means reducing interview stages. Sometimes it means identifying where internal delays are costing businesses their preferred candidates.

Through We Do Benchmark and our specialist finance recruitment expertise, we help employers understand what today’s finance market expects before recruitment even begins. Because losing great finance candidates usually isn’t about one dramatic mistake. It’s the accumulation of small delays, unclear communication and slow decision-making.

And by the time you reach the offer stage…

Your best candidate may already be working somewhere else.

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