At some point, every growing business hits the same question:
Do we hire someone full-time, or do we bring in support more flexibly?
It sounds like a simple decision. It rarely is.
Because choosing the wrong model can:
And yet, most businesses still treat this as a binary choice: hire or don’t hire
The smarter approach is slightly more nuanced.
It’s about understanding what kind of capacity you actually need, and when.
Flexible support gives businesses access to skilled professionals on a part-time or fractional basis, typically starting from a set number of hours per month.
It is designed for:
In practice, flexible support allows you to:
A full-time remote hire is a dedicated professional who becomes a long-term part of your team.
They:
This model is designed for:
This is where most businesses get it wrong.
They ask: “Can we afford a full-time hire?”
Instead of: “What type of capacity do we need right now?”
That shift changes everything. Because not all pressure points are equal.
Flexible support is often the better choice when:
If work comes in waves, a full-time hire can quickly become underutilised.
Flexible support allows you to scale hours based on demand.
Hiring locally can take weeks or months.
Flexible models allow businesses to access support far more quickly, which is critical when teams are already stretched.
If you are not yet clear on:
Then committing to a full-time hire too early can create more problems than it solves.
Flexible support gives you breathing room to define the role properly.
Sometimes the goal is not to build a team.
It is simply to remove pressure:
Flexible support is ideal here.
This is often the first step businesses take after recognising they have a capacity issue, as discussed in Hiring Isn’t the Problem. Capacity Is.
There comes a point where flexible support is no longer enough.
That is when a full-time role makes more sense.
You know:
That is a strong signal you are ready for a full-time hire.
If the work is there every day, a part-time model can create fragmentation.
A full-time role brings:
Functions like:
often become critical as the business scales.
These are not side roles. They need dedicated ownership.
Flexible support solves immediate pressure.
Full-time hires help build long-term structure.
Both are valuable. The timing just needs to be right.
Choosing the wrong model does not just affect cost.
It affects:
Too early with a full-time hire:
Too late:
That is why this is not just a hiring decision. It is a scaling decision.
The best operators do not treat this as a one-time decision.
They treat it as a progression.
It often looks like this:
This is a far more controlled way to scale. It also avoids the common trap of hiring reactively.
Let’s be honest.
The biggest mistake is not choosing the wrong model.
It is not thinking about it properly at all.
Businesses:
None of those approaches work long-term. The businesses that scale well are far more deliberate.
Start with one question:
Is this a defined role or a developing need?
If it is defined and consistent, build the role.
If it is evolving or urgent, start with flexible support.
Get that right, and everything else becomes easier. For more in-depth information on our hiring models, take a look at our guide.
Flexible support gives businesses access to skilled professionals on a part-time basis, allowing them to add capacity without committing to a full-time hire.
Flexible support is ideal when workloads are inconsistent, roles are still evolving, or immediate support is needed to relieve pressure.
A full-time hire makes sense when the role is clearly defined, the workload is consistent, and the position is central to long-term growth.
Yes. Many businesses start with flexible support and transition into full-time roles as their needs become clearer and more consistent.
It can be, particularly in the early stages when a business does not yet need a full-time role. It allows you to match cost more closely to actual workload.
A bad hire costs more than £130,000. This free online session shows you how to get the next one right.
When:Thursday 11 June at 4pm (UK)
Host: James Townsend-Rose, CEO of Outsourcery
No fluff. Honest insight. Real examples. Live Q&A.