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Market Readiness Audit

The result shows what the market sees, not what you hope it sees.

Role details
Score the role
Category Score
Role Scope
Does the brief give a strong candidate a clear reason to engage?
Hiring Process
Is the process defined, fast and owned by one person?
Skillset Availability
How many people in the UK can actually do this job?
Salary & Benefits
Where does the package sit against current market rates?
Working Model
How much flexibility does the role offer week to week?
Location
How far is the role from the nearest talent hub?
Progression & Appeal
What career story does this role offer a strong candidate?
Company Reputation
What does a candidate find when they research the business?
Manager Appeal
Does the hiring manager add to the candidate's reason to accept?

Nine categories, each weighted by where searches actually break. Scores run from 1 (major blocker) to 5 (strong market advantage). The weighted average converts to a market readiness score on a 25% to 100% scale.

Planning model, not a guarantee. The weighting reflects nufuture search experience, market judgement and observed points of failure in hiring conversations. It is designed to support discussion and should be calibrated against live search outcomes over time.

Why Role Scope and Hiring Process carry the most weight. The brief is the first filter: it gives a strong candidate a reason to engage. The process is a very close second because it protects momentum once interest exists. A strong brief and a clean process surface candidates who were not actively looking and convert passive interest into genuine engagement.

Why Salary sits at 13%. Compensation is cited most often as the reason candidates decline offers, not as the reason searches fail. Searches fail earlier, at the engagement and shortlist stage. That is where Role Scope and Hiring Process operate. The weighting reflects where market readiness is most often won or lost.

Working Model and Location work together. Working Model measures flexibility. Location measures reach. Distance matters more when onsite attendance is frequent, so the location score adjusts in line with the working model. Fully remote roles are treated as location-neutral because commute distance does not restrict the candidate pool.

CategoryWeightWhat it measures
Role Scope22%Brief quality, ownership clarity, reason to engage
Hiring Process18%Speed, decision ownership, stage count
Skillset Availability15%Active candidate pool depth in the UK market
Salary & Benefits13%Package alignment against current market rates
Working Model13%Flexibility requirements vs current candidate expectations
Location8%Reach from the nearest relevant talent hub, auto-scored
Progression & Appeal4%Career story the role offers a strong candidate
Company Reputation4%What candidates find when they research the business
Manager Appeal3%Hiring manager credibility and ability to sell the role

Formula: weighted score = sum of (score × weight) ÷ 100. Market readiness = 25 + ((weighted score − 1) ÷ 4 × 75). Range: 25% (highest risk) to 100% (exceptional brief, strong market).

Working modelDistance bandsWhat it means
RemoteAny distance = 5Location-neutral. Distance does not restrict the candidate pool.
1 day onsite<10=5, 10-25=4, 26-60=3, 61-90=2, 91+=1Longer journeys are more tolerable when the commute is infrequent.
2 to 3 days onsite<10=5, 10-20=4, 21-35=3, 36-50=2, 51+=1Distance becomes a regular weekly barrier.
4 days onsite / onsite<10=5, 10-15=4, 16-25=3, 26-40=2, 41+=1Frequent onsite requirements make commute distance a major filter.