News & Insights | Recruitment Brief Template: What to Include (So Recruiters Can Deliver)

Recruitment Brief Template: What to Include (So Recruiters Can Deliver)

20 January 2026
Recruitment Brief Template: What to Include (So Recruiters Can Deliver)

Most recruitment delays start with an unclear brief.

If the recruiter doesn’t understand the role outcome, what’s truly non-negotiable, what “good” looks like at day 30/90, and how decisions will be made, you’ll often get slow shortlists, mismatched candidates, and longer time-to-fill.

Need help recruiting for ongoing roles? Permanent Recruitment

Key takeaways

  • A clear brief reduces back-and-forth and improves shortlist quality.
  • Limit “must-haves” to 3–5 true non-negotiables.
  • Define success outcomes (first 90 days) to reduce “culture fit” guessing.
  • Set a decision timeline before you start sourcing.

The one-page recruitment brief template (copy/paste)

Copy this into a doc and fill it out with the hiring manager + key stakeholders before you brief a recruiter.

Section A: Role basics

  • Role title:
  • Business unit / site:
  • Location (and travel requirements):
  • Employment type: full-time / part-time / fixed-term (and expected tenure)
  • Reporting line:
  • Team size / direct reports (if any):
  • Start date (ideal / latest acceptable):

Section B: Why the role exists

  • The problem this role solves:
  • Top 3 outcomes expected in the first 90 days:
  • What success looks like at 12 months:

Section C: Scope and responsibilities

  • Core responsibilities (5–8 bullets):
  • Key stakeholders (internal/external):
  • Tools/systems used:

Section D: Must-haves vs nice-to-haves

Must-haves (no compromise):

Nice-to-haves (trade-offs allowed):

Deal-breakers (do not submit if):

Section E: Skills, experience, and requirements

  • Years of experience: guidance, not a barrier
  • Qualifications: mandatory / preferred
  • Licences/tickets: mandatory / preferred
  • Safety/compliance requirements:
  • Background checks (if required):

Section F: Compensation and benefits

  • Pay range (or band):
  • Bonus / allowances (if applicable):
  • Super, vehicle, tools, travel support (if applicable):
  • Flexibility / roster expectations:

Section G: Candidate profile (helps sourcing)

  • Backgrounds that tend to succeed:
  • Backgrounds that tend to struggle:
  • Competitors or adjacent industries to target:

Section H: Process and decision-making

  • Interview stages:
  • Who interviews (names/roles):
  • Assessment tasks (if any):
  • Reference checks: yes/no (who owns it)
  • Offer approvals (who signs off):
  • Target timeline:
  1. Brief approved by:
  2. Shortlist by:
  3. Interviews by:
  4. Offer by:

Section I: Employer value proposition

  • Why a good candidate would join:
  • What makes this role/team unique:
  • Growth opportunities:

Optional: a short “why now” paragraph

What’s changing in the business that makes this role urgent?

Common mistakes (and quick fixes)

Mistake 1: “We need someone ASAP” with no decision timeline

Fix: set a shortlist date and an interview window, and pre-book time in calendars.

Mistake 2: Too many “must-haves”

Fix: list 3–5 true non-negotiables. Everything else is a trade-off.

Mistake 3: No clarity on pay

Fix: provide a range or band early. It saves everyone time.

Mistake 4: Vague “culture fit”

Fix: define behaviours and values in observable terms (e.g. “runs pre-starts”, “documents hazards”, “coaches apprentices”).

Where this template fits

This recruitment brief template supports multiple service areas:

Still deciding on the hiring model? Read: Labour Hire vs Permanent Recruitment: Choosing the Right Hiring Model

Planning a ramp-up? Use the pillar template: Workforce Planning Template (90 Days)

FAQ

Should the brief include a strict number of years of experience?

Use it as guidance, not a hard filter. Focus on capability, outcomes, and requirements.

Should we include the pay range in the brief?

Yes. A range improves candidate fit and speeds up the process.

How long should a recruitment brief take to complete?

If stakeholders are aligned, 20–40 minutes is realistic. The time saved later is significant.

Next step

If you want a faster shortlist with better fit, use this template and engage a recruitment partner: Permanent Recruitment

General information only: this article provides general information and is not legal advice.

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