Vague Job Descriptions Comp

What You Will Learn in This Post

  • Why record application volumes do not equal a healthy candidate pipeline in Marketing, Media & Events recruitment
  • How vague job descriptions silently push the strongest Marketing, Media & Events candidates away from your roles
  • The data showing that clear, focused briefs cut time-to-fill, screening time, and bad-hire risk
  • Practical steps to turn a generic wish-list into a brief that attracts the right Marketing, Media & Events talent

Most leaders in Marketing, Media & Events have noticed something odd. Applications per role have surged, yet the comment around the leadership table has not changed. “There are no good candidates out there.”

The data backs up the paradox. Recent research found that the average job advert now attracts around 340 applicants, up 182% since 2021. Yet 70% of hiring leads still report a talent shortage.

Higher volume, lower fit. So, what has changed? The bottleneck rarely sits where leaders assume it does. The brief itself is quietly steering the wrong applications in and the right Marketing, Media & Events talent away.

What the Marketing, Media & Events candidate landscape looks like right now

The CIPD’s most recent UK research found that 64% of employers struggled to attract candidates over the past year, and 69% said competition for well-qualified talent had increased. The UK is no longer a soft market for skilled hire/recruitment.

Niche technical skills, sector expertise, and strong soft skills remain scarce. Specialist Marketing, Media & Events talent has options. They choose where to apply, where to engage in the recruitment process, and where to walk away unbothered.

Candidates feel pressure too. In one 2025 survey, more than 90% described the market as competitive, with 63% calling it intense. The best people quickly filter out roles that feel unclear or generic.

The disconnect is quietly costing you applications from the best people

UK research from job platform Totaljobs uncovered a striking gap. While 74% of recruiters/hiring managers said clear, detailed job descriptions improve application quality, 69% of job seekers reported that expectations in recent ads felt unclear.

The same study found 40% of candidates think ads list too many requirements, and 39% say the titles themselves are unclear. The picture for any Marketing, Media & Events hiring manager is consistent. Vague briefs attract the wrong applications, in larger numbers.

AI is amplifying the noise. Recent data shows that two in five candidates apply to roles in bulk, and 58% use AI tools in their search. When briefs are weak, AI helps people apply to almost anything.

The cumulative effect is that recruitment teams spend their time screening unsuitable CVs/resumes rather than speaking to the few people who fit. The strongest Marketing, Media & Events candidates, meanwhile, see no clear reason to engage and move on.

Diversity also takes a hit. When briefs are crammed with inflated requirements, candidates from less traditional backgrounds self-select out. Many of the best Marketing, Media & Events performers come from those routes. A vague brief loses them before any CV/resume arrives.

What a clear, focused brief delivers Clear Focussed Brief 1

The numbers on briefing quality are striking. One sector-based study found that improving job description accuracy reduced time-to-fill by 25 to 30%, lifted candidate fit from 55% to 80%, and cut screening time by around 40%. 

Separate analysis reports that organisations/organizations with clear job descriptions reduce time-to-hire by an average of ten days. That difference alone lowers cost-per-hire and reduces the risk of losing strong Marketing, Media & Events candidates to faster-moving competitors.

There is a candidate-experience benefit too. 78% of job seekers say a well-structured job description improves their application experience. That experience feeds directly into employer-brand perception and later offer acceptance.

In a noisy, AI-inflated market, briefing clarity is now a competitive advantage. Briefs that demonstrate understanding of the role do something that AI-padded ads cannot. They earn the attention of the Marketing, Media & Events talent you want to hire.

Why your strongest Marketing, Media & Events candidates walk away

Even strong candidates are not waiting around. Gartner’s Voice of the Candidate research found that 50% of job seekers back out of an offer before starting work. Of those who have accepted, 47% remain open to other offers.

A 2024 candidate-experience report adds weight. 52% of candidates have declined an offer due to poor experience during the recruitment process. Brief quality is where most of that experience either holds up or starts to fall apart.

The pattern is consistent. When the brief is vague, the interviews drift. Hiring managers ask different questions of different candidates. Feedback is inconsistent. Strong Marketing, Media & Events candidates lose confidence in the leader, the role, and the organisation/organization.

By the time an offer goes out, the better candidates have either accepted elsewhere or lost the conviction to say yes. The cost shows up as a re-run process, a backfilled offer, or a vacancy left open longer than needed.

Sharp BriefFrom wish-list to sharp brief: what good looks like in practice

The most effective Marketing, Media & Events hiring managers no longer treat the brief as an admin task. They treat it as a working session, ideally with their specialist recruiter in the room or on the call. The conversation upfront saves weeks later.

A sharp brief starts with outcomes, not a list of duties. What does success look like for this [role] at twelve and eighteen months? Which problems will the new hire have solved? Anchoring the brief here changes everything that follows.

Next, separate must-haves from nice-to-haves. A focused brief carries five to seven essential skills or experiences. Everything else moves into a desirable section. Inflated requirement lists are one of the fastest ways to deter strong Marketing, Media & Events talent.

Be explicit about flexibility, location, and salary/package. Candidates make decisions on these factors early. Burying them or leaving them ambiguous costs you applications from people who would otherwise be a strong fit for the [role].

Replace jargon and inflated job titles with clear, market-recognisable language. The aim is not to sound impressive. The aim is to be findable, scannable, and instantly understandable to the Marketing, Media & Events candidate you most want to attract.

Be honest about the role’s challenges. Strong candidates do not want a sanitised pitch. They want to know what is broken, what needs to be built, and where the autonomy sits. Candid briefs attract the right kind of confidence.

Briefing quality is now your competitive advantage

In a Marketing, Media & Events market where applications are inflated, candidates are wary, and skill shortages persist, the quality of the brief is a key document when it comes to getting the results you want from your recruitment.

Vague briefs send mixed signals, and detailed briefs do the opposite. They show that the role has been thought through, the leader knows what the job is, and the organisation/organization respects a candidates’ time.

The teams that consistently attract the strongest Marketing, Media & Events talent this year will not be the ones with the largest budgets or the best-designed careers pages. They will be the ones who do the hard thinking up front.

That thinking starts with the brief. Get it right, and the rest of the recruitment process flows. Get it wrong, and no amount of advertising spend, sourcing tools, or interview structure will fix it later.

A specialist recruiter who knows your Marketing, Media & Events can be the difference between a brief that quietly leaks talent and one that brings the right candidates to the table. The briefing conversation is where that work begins.

About Us

Reilly People is a professional Search and Select recruitment firm specialising in Media, Marketing & Events - established in 1993.

We recruit up to board level in: Marketing; Sales and Business Development; Marketing Analytics; Conference and Event Production and Management. In more than three decades in business, using our industry knowledge and management experience we’ve placed candidates throughout the UK and all over the world, including EMEA; USA and Asia Pacific. 

John Cambridge cropAbout John Reilly

From a media sales career in London with Capital Radio; LBC; and latterly Kiss FM as Head of Sales, I established Reilly People in 1993 to offer the recruitment service I wish I’d received as an employer: a mature approach from an experienced manager to help Businesses hire talent without diverting time trawling through scores of CVs and interviewing a dozen hopefuls.

I’ve always utilised the latest tools from a rolodex to AI, which has included building, over decades, a large, targeted LinkedIn network. Yet the principles remain the same: clearly understand what you, the employer wants and sometimes use my experience to help you define that; then deliver it with as little fuss as possible.

I focus on Marketing; Sales and Analytics roles with a variety of commercial companies, including Media and Events businesses.

 

 

 

“I have been working with John for many years and I have been so impressed by his ability to understand perfectly the type of profiles I am looking for. Today I have got two sales stars in my team and both have been headhunted by John. He is an expert when it comes to find the needed skills for your vacancy but also to get the perfect match for our company’s culture. Adrien Collillieux

I highly recommend any media or events companies to work with John!” 

                                 Adrien Collilieux, Group Event Director – CloserStill Media 

 

At Reilly People we’ve been helping businesses find Marketing and Sales talent and job seekers find their ideal roles for over 30 years. If you want to find out how we can help, call me on 0203 691 0040 or email here.

 

Published in Blog
We use cookies to provide you with the best possible browsing experience on our website. You can find out more below.
Cookies are small text files that can be used by websites to make a user's experience more efficient. The law states that we can store cookies on your device if they are strictly necessary for the operation of this site. For all other types of cookies we need your permission. This site uses different types of cookies. Some cookies are placed by third party services that appear on our pages.
+Necessary
Necessary cookies help make a website usable by enabling basic functions like page navigation and access to secure areas of the website. The website cannot function properly without these cookies.
ResolutionUsed to ensure the correct version of the site is displayed to your device.
essential
SessionUsed to track your user session on our website.
essential
+Statistics
Statistic cookies help website owners to understand how visitors interact with websites by collecting and reporting information anonymously.
Google AnalyticsGoogle Analytics is an analytics tool to measure website, app, digital and offline data to gain user insights.
Yes
No

More Details