There is something faintly ironic about how agencies talk about hiring top billers. The focus is almost always on attraction. What will tempt them? What will land them? How much will it take?
What gets less attention is the fact that top billers are conducting their own due diligence at exactly the same time. Because they are.
By the time someone is consistently billing at a high level, they understand their value. More importantly, they understand risk. Moving agencies is not a casual decision when you have a strong desk, established relationships and serious income attached to your name. A misstep can take months to recover from. Sometimes longer.
So when top billers explore the market, they are not just listening to offers. They are assessing businesses.
And the criteria go well beyond commission.
It starts with money. It does not end there
Let’s deal with the obvious first. High performers care about earnings. Recruitment is a performance driven industry and top billers are usually unapologetic about that. They track numbers for a living. They understand margin, leverage and output better than most.
But once someone is already earning well, small uplifts lose their power. An extra five percent looks attractive in a spreadsheet. It does not automatically change the quality of leadership, the strength of the brand or the direction of the business.
What experienced billers really look for is earning trajectory. Can I build something bigger here over the next three to five years? Is there genuine market depth? Is the agency positioned for growth, or simply maintaining?
They are thinking about scalability, not just this year’s commission statement.
Brand is not about ego. It is about leverage
Top billers understand something newer recruiters sometimes underestimate: your personal brand and your agency’s brand are intertwined.
When considering a move, they are asking practical questions. Will this name open doors? Will clients take meetings more readily? Will candidates trust the process? Or will I spend the first six months explaining who we are and why we are credible?
A strong agency reputation reduces friction. It shortens sales cycles. It strengthens positioning in competitive markets. For someone used to operating at pace, that leverage matters.
Nobody billing serious numbers wants to make their own job harder by attaching themselves to a business with inconsistent standards or a shaky reputation.
Leadership is quietly decisive
If there is one factor that consistently influences decisions, it is leadership.
Top billers have usually experienced different management styles. They know the difference between clarity and noise. During interviews or informal conversations, they are paying attention to far more than growth targets. Is there a clear strategy? Is the direction commercially logical? How are challenges discussed? Is responsibility owned, or deflected?
When your income is directly tied to leadership decisions, competence matters. High performers do not expect perfection. They do expect direction. They want to feel that the business is being steered by people who understand the market properly, not reacting to it week by week.
Infrastructure: the unglamorous deal breaker
This rarely dominates interview conversations, but it often determines long-term satisfaction.
Top billers value their time. They know exactly how many calls, meetings and follow ups sit behind a successful placement. If systems are clunky, compliance is chaotic or marketing support is weak, performance is quietly eroded. It may not show immediately. But over twelve months, inefficiency compounds.
A serious recruiter wants to focus on revenue generating activity, not internal firefighting. Agencies that run smoothly enable billing at scale. Those that rely on individual heroics eventually frustrate even their strongest performers.
Freedom is appealing. Functional support is far more powerful.
Culture for adults
Early in their careers, many recruiters thrive in loud, high energy environments. Targets are aggressive, celebrations are dramatic and competition is visible. As careers progress, priorities often shift.
Experienced billers tend to value transparency over theatrics. They want clear expectations, rational targets and honest performance conversations. They want recognition that feels genuine, not forced. They want a business built on commercial logic rather than short term hype.
This does not mean they lack ambition. Quite the opposite. They simply prefer ambition delivered with clarity rather than chaos. Loud does not always mean effective.
The bigger question: what am I building?
At a certain point, the conversation moves beyond next quarter’s commission.
Top billers start thinking in longer timelines. Am I building leadership capability? Am I building equity? Am I strengthening my reputation within a defined niche? Is there a pathway beyond being the highest number on a leaderboard?
Agencies that can articulate a credible future stand out immediately. Not vague promises of progression, but tangible examples. Who has grown here? How? Over what timeframe? What does the next level genuinely involve?
Ambitious people want visibility. If the future feels unclear, they will look elsewhere for clarity.
Alignment is what wins
When agencies compete solely on commission, they reduce the conversation to numbers. When they present a coherent proposition that combines earnings, brand strength, leadership, infrastructure and long-term opportunity, the conversation becomes far more compelling.
Top billers are not simply revenue generators scanning the market for a higher split. They are commercially intelligent, reputation conscious and usually more strategic than people give them credit for.
Commission opens the door. Alignment closes it.
So, is your offer strong enough?
Most agencies believe they have a compelling proposition for top billers. Fewer have genuinely examined it through the lens of someone already successful.
If you are serious about attracting high performers, it is worth asking difficult questions. Is your commission competitive, yes, but is it structured to reward growth properly? Can you clearly articulate your strategy beyond the next quarter? Do you have real examples of progression? Does your infrastructure genuinely support billing at scale?
Top billers will be assessing all of this, even if they do not say it directly.
If you are a recruitment leader looking to strengthen your hiring proposition, or a top performer quietly weighing up your next move, it helps to speak to people who see these decisions play out every day.
At Harrison Sands, we work exclusively within the recruitment market. We understand what attracts strong billers, what makes them hesitate and what actually makes a move successful long term.
If you would like an honest conversation about how your agency stacks up, or what your options realistically look like, we are always happy to talk.


