Hiring

How Fast Can You Hire an Engineer?

Real timelines for each hiring path, and why most startups lose more to a slow process than to a high salary.

RE

Roberto Espinoza

CEO, Ruzora

June 14, 20267 min read

Speed is the part of hiring founders underestimate. They obsess over the salary and shrug at the calendar, even though a role that sits open for four months often costs more in lost roadmap than the pay difference ever would. Here are the real timelines for each path.

Key Takeaways

  • A full-time senior search averages 2–4 months to offer, plus ramp.
  • Freelance is fast to start but slow to trust and weak on continuity.
  • Staff augmentation with a vetted bench delivers a shortlist in 72 hours.
  • An open role has a real cost: lost roadmap, overloaded team, slipped launches.

The Real Timelines

PathTime to shortlistTime to productive
Full-time searchWeeks to months3–6 months
Freelance marketplaceDaysDays, but variable
Staff augmentation (vetted bench)72 hours2–3 weeks

The full-time numbers assume everything goes well: the search fills, the candidate accepts, and the fit is right. When any of those slips, you reset the clock. The augmentation speed comes from maintaining a pre-vetted bench so the hard filtering is already done before you ask.

Why a Slow Hire Costs More Than a Pricey One

An open senior role isn't neutral while you search. The roadmap slips, the rest of the team absorbs the overflow and burns out, and launches move. Those costs compound every week the seat is empty, and they rarely show up in the hiring spreadsheet. Weigh them against the salary difference you're optimizing and the math usually flips. This is the same runway logic behind choosing augmentation over a slow full-time search.

A calendar and laptop showing a hiring timeline
A calendar and laptop showing a hiring timeline

How to Hire Faster Without Lowering the Bar

Speed and quality aren't opposites if the vetting happens before you start, not during. A provider with a maintained bench can hand you a shortlist in 72 hours precisely because the rejection work already happened. You interview to confirm, not to filter, and onboard in two to three weeks. Model the cost of the delay you're avoiding in the ROI calculator.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take to hire a senior engineer full-time?

Typically 2–4 months to an accepted offer, plus another one to two months of ramp. Any slip in the search resets the clock.

How is 72 hours possible?

A pre-vetted bench. The five-stage filtering is done before you ask, so you get a shortlist of confirmed-senior engineers immediately and interview to confirm fit.

Doesn't hiring fast mean lowering the bar?

Not if the vetting happens upfront. Speed comes from having already filtered, not from skipping the filter.

The Bottom Line

Stop optimizing only the salary and start counting the calendar. A role open for months costs more in lost roadmap than the pay gap you're negotiating. Move the vetting upfront, and you can hire fast without lowering the bar.

Roberto Espinoza is CEO of Ruzora, which helps US startups hire pre-vetted senior LATAM engineers in 72 hours. See available engineers.

RE

Roberto Espinoza

CEO, Ruzora

Roberto is the founder and CEO of Ruzora. He works directly with US startup founders and CTOs on staff-augmentation and software-factory engagements, and personally reviews senior engineer placements.

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