Where Recruiters Make the Money and Never See It - Executive Recruiter LHH Employee Review

1.0
13 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

You quickly learn how much revenue corporations can squeeze out of recruiters while reminding you daily that to upper management, you are ultimately just another number on a spreadsheet.

Cons

The compensation structure became outright demoralizing. Recruiters could generate hundreds of thousands of dollars in revenue for the company and still struggle to see meaningful commission checks because of the draw recovery system and constantly shifting payout structures. The “base salary” is essentially money you have to pay back before you can earn anything additional, and once you fall behind, the deficit rolls forward month after month until many recruiters feel financially trapped no matter how hard they work. Watching the company collect massive margins off individual contributors while recruiters themselves saw little proportional reward became one of the most frustrating parts of working there. The culture is heavily KPI-obsessed to an unhealthy degree. Weekly metrics are tracked aggressively, and if you miss targets, your name ends up on internal lists discussed by management where you are expected to explain yourself and justify how you will “make up” the numbers the following week — even if you were out on approved PTO. Employees are treated more like spreadsheet entries than professionals. Leadership turnover, repeated restructures, constant layoffs, and top-heavy management created an environment driven by pressure, politics, and fear rather than support or development. Burnout is normalized, overwork is expected, and morale continues to decline because upper management feels completely disconnected from the reality recruiters deal with every day.

Explore other reviews about LHH

5.0
2 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Flexible hours. High client volume.

Cons

None I can think of right now.

1.0
5 Jun 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

None to speak of really

Cons

Exploitative WFH culture that weaponizes visibility, and protects middle management even when their behavior is full on destructive which fuels a moral hazard issue whereby bad leaders can put on “face” and feel invincible. Unusually long “meetings” of managers fanning their superiority and belittling you, or focusing on short sighted optics. Members of my team routinely compared their one-on-one interactions in an effort to make sense of concerning behavior. Recruiting, many sales regions and pricing are clown cars of bad management. Don’t expect fair compensation or investment in any capacity regardless of how well you perform or what they have promised. Being a high performer does not change that - they simply learn to game you. These issues are so deeply entrenched due to moral hazard that they’re baked into the culture. Echoing others: “You will need therapy during and after ” but they will not pay you enough to afford it. They manage by micromanagement and fear. “Even if you do a great job if you are not a favorite you will have a difficult time here. It doesn’t matter if you’re doing your job if you are not accepted, however I think that’s their strategy,” said another and to add to that, credit for your work if arduous will go to someone else, and they will leave you with crumbs of recognition for work that required no business school degree to double down on hiding what you had to offer. A senior sales lead who generated boatloads in revenue before departing described her experience in meetings as being treated like, “Little girl, go sit in the corner.” That captures the dynamic precisely. I felt seen hearing that.

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