The cost-per-hire (CPH) metric measures the costs associated with sourcing, recruiting and staffing open position in an organization. External costs are commonly defined as expenses paid to external vendors or individuals during recruiting; while internal costs are expenses related to the internal staff, capital and organizational costs of the recruitment/staffing function. Examples of these costs include:
External Costs
Advertising and marketing expenses
Background checks and eligibility to work expenses
Campus recruiting expenses
Consulting services
Contingency fees: contingent to regular
Drug-testing expenses
Employee referral awards/ payments
Immigration expenses
Job fair/recruiting event expenses
Pre-hire health screens
Pre-screening fees
Recruitment process outsourcing (RPO) fees
Relocation fees
Sign-on bonuses
Sourcing costs
Travel and expenses, candidate
Travel and expenses, recruiter
Technology costs
Third-party agency fees
Internal Costs
Cost of recruiting staff
Cost of sourcing staff
Internal overhead for government compliance
Non-labor office costs
Recruiting learning and development
Secondary management cost of time for events
Secondary management cost of time for recruiting
Depending upon the type of CPH metric being calculated (either for an internal reflection of a single organization's costs or to compare the CPH data across various organizations), employers may only use some of the above costs, or use other data not listed above that is meaningful to the organization.
An organization run by AI is not a futuristic concept. Such technology is already a part of many workplaces and will continue to shape the labor market and HR. Here's how employers and employees can successfully manage generative AI and other AI-powered systems.