If You Want Talent, Give Them a Reason to Care

Everywhere you look, hiring leaders are sounding the same alarm: “There’s a talent shortage.” But is that really the problem? Because when your job descriptions read like every other one out there, same bullet points, same buzzwords, same vague promises, top candidates don’t feel seen. They feel invisible. The result? The best talent doesn’t apply. They scroll past. They disengage. Not because they aren’t looking, but because they don’t see themselves in the roles being pitched to them. The truth is, we’re not running out of qualified people. We’re running out of compelling reasons for them to choose you. This blog explores what most organizations get wrong about talent attraction, why generic job descriptions are costing you great people, and how sharper storytelling can close the gap between openings and outcomes.

Section 1:

Talent Isn’t Missing. It’s Mismatched.

Let’s get one thing straight: the talent pool isn’t dry. It’s distracted. Right now, your ideal candidate might be sitting in another job, quietly open to new opportunities, but totally turned off by the lack of relevance or resonance in what they’re seeing. Here’s what they’re tired of:
  • Corporate buzzwords that say nothing about the work (“synergy,” “cross-functional,” “fast-paced”).
  • Laundry list job descriptions that include every skill imaginable, but offer no clarity on what success looks like.
  • Cliché selling points like “great culture” or “competitive salary”, as if those aren’t table stakes now.
Candidates, especially mid- to senior-level professionals, don’t just want any role. They want a role that speaks to their story. Their ambition. Their value. And if your hiring narrative doesn’t offer that? They’ll keep scrolling.

Section 2:

Job Descriptions Aren’t Just Legal Documents. They’re Marketing Assets.

The average candidate spends less than 14 seconds scanning a job post before deciding whether to engage. In that tiny window, they’re asking:
  • What makes this team different?
  • Is this the kind of work that energizes me?
  • Will I be seen and supported here?
  • What’s in it for me beyond compensation?
Too often, job posts fail to answer those questions. They focus on requirements, not reasons. But in a market where demand outpaces supply, especially in IT, healthcare, data, and tech-adjacent roles, you’re not just filling out jobs. You’re marketing them. Think about how much time your organization spends crafting the right messaging for a product launch or sales pitch. Now ask yourself: are you doing the same for your roles? Because in today’s hiring landscape, your job description is your first impression. It’s your brand’s handshake. And if it falls flat, no amount of sourcing will fix the problem.

Section 3:

The Story You Tell Shapes the Talent You Attract

When hiring leaders say, “We’re not getting the right kind of applicants,” it’s often not a pipeline problem. It’s a positioning one. The story you tell and how you tell it, directly impacts:
  • Who applies (and who doesn’t)
  • How candidates self-select (or self-reject)
  • Whether they see this as just another job, or a pivotal career move
A high-performing product manager isn’t just looking for scope; they want to know how much ownership they’ll have. A software engineer isn’t just looking at your stack; they want to know if the team values clean code or speed. A healthcare operations lead isn’t just looking for job security, they want to know if they’ll make a meaningful impact. If your job pitch doesn’t speak to what drives that person, you’re not going to attract them, no matter how well you pay.

Section 4:

From Generic to Magnetic, What Strong Storytelling Looks Like

The fix isn’t more words. It’s better ones. Here’s what magnetic job storytelling includes: A compelling “why now”, Is this a new role? A transformation project? A response to growth? That context matters. A peek into the team, who will they learn from, report to build with? Candidates care more about peers than perks. Clarity on the challenge, what is this role really solving? Vague tasks don’t inspire. Real missions do. Tone that matches your culture, A flat, formal job description for a fast, scrappy startup? Mismatch. The language should feel like your team. When companies take time to get this right, the quality of applicants rises, not just in skill, but in alignment. Because people don’t want to join just any company. They want to join the right one, at the right time, for the right reason.

Section 5:

The SRA Approach, Storytelling Built Into Delivery

At SRA, we’ve baked this principle into how we work with clients every day, especially in competitive industries across Canada and the US. Here’s how:
  • Intake That Goes Deeper: We don’t settle for bullet points. Our recruiters dig into the why, the team dynamics, and what makes this role worth leaving a job for.
  • Pitch-Driven Job Marketing: We tailor job posts for the right audience, and adjust them to market realities. That means better targeting, stronger clicks, and a bigger pipeline.
  • Recruiter-Led Storytelling: Our delivery pods aren’t just sending resumes. They’re telling stories. Every candidate gets a contextual pitch, not just a link to apply.
  • Market-Aligned Positioning: We constantly benchmark roles from title to scope to tone, ensuring that what you’re offering isn’t just appealing. It’s competitive.
Because in a noisy market, the clearest voice wins. And we make sure yours cuts through.

Conclusion: If You’re Not Telling the Right Story, You’re Not Hiring the Right People

The war for talent isn’t being lost because there aren’t enough skilled people. It’s being lost because companies aren’t telling stories worth responding to. You don’t need more candidates. You need more connection. So before you spend more money on job ads, before you push another round of outreach, ask yourself:
  • Does our pitch reflect the true value of this role?
  • Would a top performer feel excited reading this post?
  • Are we describing a job… or offering a mission?
Because great candidates don’t just want a position. They want to be part of something meaningful. And if you can show them what that is? They’ll choose you.
Sabah Shakeel
Staff Writer, Digital Marketing Specialist
SRA Group