| Hire ID | Role | Req open | First contact | First interview | Final interview | Offer date | Offer accepted | Start date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| H-101 | Recruiter | 2026-01-05 | 2026-01-08 | 2026-01-12 | 2026-01-18 | 2026-01-20 | 2026-01-22 | 2026-02-03 |
| H-102 | HR Analyst | 2026-01-10 | 2026-01-13 | 2026-01-17 | 2026-01-24 | 2026-01-27 | 2026-01-30 | 2026-02-10 |
| H-103 | People Ops Partner | 2026-01-15 | 2026-01-16 | 2026-01-21 | 2026-01-28 | 2026-01-30 | 2026-02-02 | 2026-02-17 |
Tip: Use the “Fill example” button to preload similar rows into the calculator.
- Hiring cycle time = Days between Requisition Open and the selected end point (Offer Accepted or Start Date).
- Time to fill = Days between Requisition Open and Start Date.
- Stage duration = Days between two consecutive milestone dates, such as Offer Date → Offer Accepted.
Days can be counted as calendar days or business days (Mon–Fri).
- Choose the cycle end point based on your reporting standard.
- Toggle business days if you report operational working days.
- Enter an SLA target to flag hires that exceed it.
- Add one or more hire rows and fill milestone dates.
- Press Submit to view results above the form.
- Export CSV or PDF for sharing and audits.
Cycle time as a planning signal
Hiring cycle time measures days from requisition open to the finish milestone you select. Track it by week and by role to forecast start dates and control vacancy cost. A stable median supports staffing plans better than an occasional fast close, because long-tail delays can move critical projects. Use the hires analyzed count to confirm you have enough volume for comparisons. Pair the metric with pipeline conversion rates to avoid optimizing speed while lowering quality of hire.
Stage metrics that reveal bottlenecks
Stage splits show where time accumulates. Req to contact reflects sourcing readiness and requisition clarity. Contact to first interview exposes scheduling capacity and response speed. First to final interview indicates panel availability and assessment depth. Final interview to offer often captures debrief cadence and approvals. Offer to accept reflects candidate decision time. Compare stage averages and prioritize the largest stage first.
Targets and SLA compliance
An SLA target turns measurement into management. Set a target in days, then monitor within-target versus over-target outcomes in the results table. A useful operating goal is 80% or higher compliance for high-volume roles, with tighter targets for backfills. When compliance slips, review interviewer load, approval turnaround, and candidate communication speed before increasing sourcing volume.
Calendar days versus business days
Calendar days align with the candidate experience because weekends still extend elapsed time. Business days align with recruiter capacity and internal workflows, especially when interviews run only on weekdays. Choose one method for dashboards and keep it consistent within a quarter. If you switch, annotate the change in reporting notes and avoid mixing methods when benchmarking teams or locations.
Benchmarking by role and location
Benchmarking should be segmented. Senior roles, niche skills, and smaller talent markets usually take longer, while entry roles may close faster due to larger pipelines. Use the Role/Team field to tag region, job family, and hiring manager. Compare medians per segment and watch the spread between minimum and maximum values. Large spreads often signal inconsistent kickoff quality or decision discipline.
Using exports for leadership updates
Exports make the results shareable. Use CSV for analysis tools and headcount dashboards, and PDF for leadership updates. Include hire count, median cycle time, and the longest stage average in each report. If the longest stage exceeds the second-longest by about 30%, focus improvements there first. Typical fixes include faster debriefs, pre-approved ranges, and reserved interview blocks.
FAQs
1) What is the difference between hiring cycle time and time to fill?
Hiring cycle time ends at offer acceptance or start date, depending on your setting. Time to fill always measures requisition open to start date, reflecting how quickly a position is fully staffed.
2) Which end point should I use for reporting?
Use offer acceptance if you want recruiting performance before onboarding. Use start date if your business defines completion as a seated employee. Keep the same choice across quarters for clean trend analysis.
3) Why does median sometimes look better than average?
Median reduces the impact of extreme delays, such as background checks or offer renegotiations. It often represents the “typical” search more accurately when cycle times are skewed.
4) How do I interpret a long Final interview → Offer stage?
A long gap often indicates slower decisions, compensation approvals, or reference checks. Review debrief timing, approval workflow, and offer preparation steps. Improving this stage can quickly lower overall cycle time.
5) When should I switch to business days?
Switch when your internal SLA is based on working days or when recruiter capacity planning drives decisions. Calendar days remain useful for candidate experience and external communication.
6) Can I use this for multiple teams in one report?
Yes. Enter one row per hire and use the Role/Team field to label the segment. Export CSV, then pivot by team to compare cycle time distributions and stage averages.