Per-Seat recruiting has moved from niche to meaningful over the last 18 months. The subscription model — fixed monthly fees for unlimited hires within scope — is reshaping how growth-stage SaaS companies think about hiring at scale. For the right use cases, the economics meaningfully outperform traditional contingency. Understanding when Per-Seat works and when it doesn’t is increasingly important for any company hiring 3+ similar roles per quarter.
What Per-Seat actually is
Per-Seat recruiting works as a subscription. The company pays a fixed monthly fee for dedicated recruiting capacity — typically structured around a specific role or function (SDR pod, mid-market AE expansion, CSM scale-up). The recruiting partner sources, screens, and presents candidates without per-placement fees. Hires happen as the company has openings and accepts candidates.
The economics: a Per-Seat engagement typically costs $8K-$15K per month for a defined scope. At the high end, that’s $180K per year. Contingency at 20-25% of first-year OTE on 8-10 hires per year ranges from $200K-$400K. The math favors Per-Seat at higher hiring volume — and the predictability favors it even at lower volume.
Where Per-Seat works best
The model fits specific situations:
- SDR pod scaling: 5-15 SDR hires per year is the sweet spot. Contingency math gets painful at this volume
- Mid-market AE expansion: Companies expanding from 4 AEs to 12 AEs over 12-18 months
- CSM scale-up: Building out the CSM function from 3 to 10+ as ARR scales
- Specialized verticals: Hiring multiple reps in a specific vertical (healthcare, fintech, manufacturing) where pattern fit matters
- Geographic expansion: Hiring teams in new cities or regions where the company needs ongoing pipeline rather than one-off searches
Where contingency still wins
Per-Seat isn’t universally optimal:
- One-off senior hires: Single VP Sales, single CRO, single Head of CS — these are retained search territory, not Per-Seat
- Low hiring volume: 1-2 hires per year doesn’t justify subscription economics. Contingency pays only when you hire
- Unpredictable hiring needs: Companies that pause hiring frequently or aren’t sure they’ll fill openings benefit from contingency’s pay-as-you-hire structure
- Niche specialized searches: Hard-to-fill specialty roles often need dedicated retained search rather than subscription capacity
What distinguishes strong Per-Seat partnerships
Not all Per-Seat models are equal. Strong partnerships share characteristics:
- Dedicated team: Specific recruiters assigned to the engagement, not pooled resources juggling multiple clients
- Clear scope: Defined role types, geographic coverage, and seniority bands. Scope creep is the most common Per-Seat failure mode
- Realistic volume expectations: Subscription works at predictable volume. Expecting 30 hires per year on a 10-hire engagement breaks the model
- Quality control built in: Replacement guarantees, candidate quality measurement, hiring manager feedback loops
- Transparent pipeline reporting: Weekly updates on candidates sourced, candidates screened, candidates submitted, candidates advanced
The economic math
A typical Per-Seat economics example for SDR hiring:
- Company hiring 12 SDRs over 12 months at $100K OTE
- Contingency cost (22%): 12 × $22K = $264K
- Per-Seat cost (annual subscription): $144K-$180K
- Net savings: $80K-$120K + better hiring velocity + clearer pipeline visibility
At lower volume (5-6 SDR hires per year), contingency may match or beat Per-Seat. The break-even point typically sits around 6-8 hires per year for the same role type.
Common Per-Seat mistakes
- Treating Per-Seat as cheap contingency: The relationship is a partnership, not a vendor transaction. Companies that engage strong feedback discipline produce dramatically better outcomes
- Unclear scope: “SDR hiring” is too vague. “Mid-market SDR pod, US-based, $80-100K OTE, hiring 1-2 per month” is workable
- Hiring manager bandwidth gaps: Strong Per-Seat partnerships require hiring managers to make decisions on candidates within 48-72 hours. Slow hiring managers degrade the model
- Mid-engagement scope changes: Changing the role profile every quarter destroys the recruiter’s ability to source effectively
The mistake to avoid
Adopting Per-Seat at volumes too low to support the economics. A company hiring 2-3 sales reps per year is better served by contingency. A company hiring 10-20 reps per year is dramatically better served by Per-Seat. Match the model to the actual hiring plan, not the aspirational one.
Hiring help
Axe Recruiting offers Per-Seat, contingency, and retained models depending on what fits your hiring plan.
We help you match the right model to your actual hiring volume and role type. No one-size-fits-all pressure.
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