1st June 2026 Church News.
Over the past few months, the conversations we are having with clients have started to shift.
Geopolitical uncertainty, rising costs, and broader economic pressure are not just headline issues. They are increasingly influencing real hiring decisions.
From our perspective at Church International, the UK recruitment market has not stopped. It has simply become more considered in how it moves.
We are still working active roles and seeing businesses continue to hire.
What has changed is the pace and decision-making behind those hires.
Roles that previously moved quickly are now often taking longer. Internal approvals are more detailed, and in some cases, decisions are being paused and revisited rather than cancelled outright.
This is where direct communication with hiring managers has become essential. It allows us to understand shifting priorities quickly and refine what “good” looks like in real time.
We are increasingly hearing more considered questions such as:
~ Is this role essential right now?
~ What impact will this hire have in the first 6 to 12 months?
~ Is this the right time to invest?
This naturally leads to a more selective and thoughtful hiring process.
Even with slower movement in parts of the market, competition for strong candidates remains high.
We are seeing:
~ More focused shortlists
~ Higher expectations from both sides
~ More stakeholders involved in decision making
At the same time, AI-assisted applications and Easy Apply platforms are increasing volume across the market, which makes it even more important to focus on real capability rather than surface-level signals.
In this environment, the role of a recruitment partner becomes far more consultative.
It is less about speed and more about continuous dialogue with clients to refine requirements as the market evolves.
That includes:
~ Providing a clear and realistic view of the market
~ Refining briefs through direct conversation with hiring managers
~ Offering honest feedback on candidate fit and availability
~ Supporting more complex and considered hiring processes
We are also spending more time with candidates, ensuring they understand the context behind opportunities rather than just the job specification.
Despite the caution, many organisations are continuing to make strategic hires.
These are particularly focused on:
~ Revenue growth
~ Operational efficiency
~ Digital and business transformation
These hires tend to be more deliberate and often have a greater long-term impact.
Uncertainty does not remove the need for hiring. It sharpens it.
The organisations that continue to hire with clarity, supported by strong communication and close partnership with their recruitment advisors, are often the ones that perform best.
From our perspective, staying close to clients through direct conversation is what ensures better outcomes when decisions are made.