Hiring in the UK isn’t just expensive anymore. It’s unpredictable.
Roles stay open for months. Salaries keep climbing. And even when you do hire, there’s no guarantee it will work out.
For growing businesses, that’s not just frustrating. It’s a real constraint on growth.
The question is no longer “who should we hire next?”
It’s becoming: “how do we add capacity without slowing everything down?”
The “hiring squeeze” refers to a combination of rising costs, talent shortages, and longer hiring cycles that are making it The “hiring squeeze” refers to a combination of rising costs, talent shortages, and longer hiring cycles that are making it harder for UK businesses to grow through traditional hiring.
According to the Office for National Statistics, vacancy levels have remained persistently high, while wage growth continues to put pressure on employers. At the same time, research from the CIPD shows that many businesses are struggling to fill roles quickly and effectively.
In simple terms:
And that combination is creating a bottleneck for growth.
Most businesses assume the issue is hiring. It isn’t.
The real issue is capacity.
When teams are stretched:
Hiring feels like the solution, but traditional hiring comes with friction:
This is exactly why more businesses are starting to rethink how they build their teams.
As explored in this recent piece on Beyond the Hiring Freeze, many UK entrepreneurs are already moving away from traditional hiring models altogether.
Instead of asking:
“Who do we hire next?”
Smart businesses are asking: “Where do we need more capacity right now?”
This is a subtle but powerful change.
It means:
And crucially, it opens the door to a different way of building teams.
A remote team is a group of professionals working together from different locations, often across countries, using digital tools to collaborate and deliver outcomes.
For UK businesses, this is no longer a trend. It’s a structural advantage.
According to McKinsey & Company, companies adopting more flexible and distributed working models can access wider talent pools and improve operational efficiency.
But the real benefit is simpler: You can add capacity faster, without the constraints of local hiring
Rather than relying solely on local hiring, businesses are:
This approach allows them to:
At Outsourcery, this typically happens through two structured models:
If you’re new to these models, this guide on the Employer of Record model provides useful context on how international hiring can be structured compliantly.
Let’s make this real.
Before:
After:
The result:
Businesses often start by adding support across key functions such as:
This is usually where people hesitate.
Fair enough.
The concern isn’t remote work. It’s whether it will create more problems than it solves.
In practice, the difference comes down to structure.
When done properly:
This is also why many businesses move away from freelancers and towards more structured models, as explored in From Freelancers to Fully Embedded Team Members.
The businesses pulling ahead right now aren’t necessarily hiring more people.
They’re building capacity in smarter ways.
They’re:
And as a result, they’re able to move faster while others are still stuck in hiring cycles.
If hiring is slowing you down, it may be time to rethink the model entirely. Let’s talk
Flexible support can often be in place within days, while full-time roles typically take a few weeks, depending on requirements.
In many cases, yes. Businesses can reduce costs significantly while maintaining quality, particularly when using structured remote hiring models.
Yes. Many remote professionals work fully aligned to UK time zones, ensuring smooth communication and collaboration.
Join James Townsend-Rose for a free, straight-talking session on building a better team without the trade-offs.
When: Thursday, 16 April at 1pm
Host: James Townsend-Rose, CEO of Outsourcery
No fluff. Honest insight. Real examples. Live Q&A.