Every SDR with LinkedIn Sales Navigator sees the same thing: a spike in active job postings. The company is hiring. Growth signal detected. Time to reach out with a message about “scaling operations” or “building out your team.”
Except you’re not the only one who sees it.
And the hiring surge might not mean what you think it means.
A hiring surge tells you something is happening. It doesn’t tell you what. One company is rebuilding after layoffs. Another is pivoting to AI and backfilling eliminated roles with different skill sets. A third is genuinely expanding into new markets. The data looks identical. The reality is different.
This is the Data Delusion pillar at work: you can measure the signal, but you can’t measure the story. And in sales, the story determines whether you’ve found an opportunity or walked into a trap.
Every SDR with LinkedIn Sales Navigator sees the same hiring surge. The commoditized signal is headcount. The competitive intelligence is job description content. Read the actual postings, not just the count. You’ll separate real opportunities (genuine expansion, AI-driven restructuring) from traps (backfilling after layoffs). That’s when hiring signals become intel.
| Component | Description | Why It Matters |
| The Signal | Job posting volume spikes 15%+ month-over-month; new roles in unfamiliar departments | Everyone sees this. SDRs, competitors, vendors. It’s commoditized. |
| The Trap | Assuming hiring = growth. Backfilling after RIFs looks identical to expansion. | You waste cycles on “scaling” conversations with companies recovering from cuts. |
| The Leverage | Job descriptions reveal skill shifts, structure changes, and strategic pivots. Most reps ignore the actual content. | This is the intelligence everyone overlooks while staring at headcount. |
| The Timing | Monitor postings for 3-4 weeks. Pattern emerges faster than headcount changes show up in Crunchbase. | Early detection, but only if you read the jobs, not just count them. |
| The Action | Map job descriptions against company direction, org changes, and competitive moves. Look for recovery patterns vs. expansion patterns. | Separates real opportunities from backfill traps. |
| The Outcome | Positioning shifts from “I noticed you’re hiring” to “I noticed your shift to AI-first hiring means X for your team.” | Specificity kills the commoditized signal problem. |
Run the Hiring Surge Detector when:
Start here: Pull the last 90 days of job postings from your target account. Most teams do this via LinkedIn Sales Navigator or Workable or similar tools. You’re looking for volume and pattern.
What to look for:
This is where most teams fail. They count jobs and move on. You’re going to read them.
Open three tabs: (1) the job description, (2) your CRM or notes on what this company did 6 months ago, (3) recent news about the company or sector.
Red flags for “backfilling after cuts” pattern:
Green flags for “genuine expansion” pattern:
AI-specific flags (2025-2026 context):
Once you’ve read the postings, map what you found to a hypothesis.
Hypothesis 1: Recovery/Backfilling
Hypothesis 2: Genuine Expansion
Hypothesis 3: Restructuring/AI-Driven Shift
You’ll know this play is working when:
“We just want to reach out to companies that are hiring. Does it matter why?”
Yes. Because the why determines the problem. A company backfilling after layoffs needs different solutions than a company expanding. If you pitch growth solutions to a recovery situation, they won’t buy. You’ll just add noise.
“Job descriptions are too vague. How do you read signal from them?”
They’re vague because most teams don’t read them closely. But if you compare five postings over three months, patterns emerge. New skill requirements, changing salary bands, shifted responsibilities, new departments, new markets. The signal is there; you’re just looking at the macro view instead of the micro view.
“LinkedIn Sales Navigator already shows me hiring volume. Why dig deeper?”
Because so does your competition. Every SDR in your vertical can see the same hiring surge. When the signal is commoditized, you win by going deeper than the commodity. That’s the job description level.
“This takes too much time for top-of-funnel prospecting.”
True. This play isn’t meant for blast campaigns. It’s for your target accounts or high-value prospects where the opportunity justifies 15 minutes of reading job descriptions. Use it on the 20% of accounts that matter.
Enterprise hiring surges often signal strategic shifts, not just growth. Read the job descriptions to understand which department is hiring and why. If your ACV is high, this is where you win: you understand their strategic intent before they announce it publicly.
Mid-market hires faster and more visibly because they’re smaller. But they’re also more likely to over-hire during good times and over-cut during downturns. Use job description analysis to catch the inflection points. When hiring shifts from “growth mode” to “survival mode” (or vice versa), that’s your timing window.
Small companies hire to fill urgent needs, not long-term strategy. Job descriptions here are less useful as signal because they change fast. But that speed is your advantage: if you reach out 1-2 weeks after posting, you catch them in active hiring mode and budget allocation mode.
AI is remaking hiring patterns in real time (2025-2026).
What’s changing:
How to adapt:
Use AI to read the job descriptions at scale. Feed your target accounts’ recent postings into a prompt like this:
You are an expert in organizational structure and strategic hiring. Analyze these job descriptions from [Company Name] posted in the last 60 days. Job descriptions: [Paste all job descriptions] Return: 1. Is this hiring pattern growth (new teams/markets), recovery (backfilling after restructuring), or shift (AI-driven realignment)? 2. What new capabilities is the company building? 3. What departments are reducing vs. expanding? 4. What is the implied strategic priority? 5. How urgent is the hiring? (High velocity = high urgency) Be specific. Use evidence from the job descriptions.
This scales the intelligence work without sacrificing specificity. You can analyze 20 accounts in an hour instead of 20 accounts in 20 hours.
The risk: AI-generated job descriptions can be vague or templated. You might pull false signals. Validate with secondary sources (LinkedIn profiles of new hires, company announcements, news).
Learn how hiring signals connect to your broader signal strategy:
The hiring surge is the most commoditized signal in B2B sales. Everyone sees it. Most reps reach out with the same message. Most get no response.
Your job isn’t to see the hiring surge faster. It’s to understand what the surge means. And the only way to do that is to read the actual job descriptions and map them to intent.
Do that, and you’ve moved from commodity signal to competitive intelligence. That’s when hiring surges become real opportunities.
How many job postings constitute a “surge”?
Context matters. For a 500-person company, 5-7 new postings in a month is normal churn. For a 100-person company, that’s significant. The 15% month-over-month increase is a better baseline. Compare current month to the same company’s last 3-month average.
Should I wait for a hiring surge to outreach, or outreach during it?
It depends on your hypothesis. If you think they’re in growth or restructuring mode (high urgency), outreach during the surge (weeks 2-4) when budget is fresh. If you think they’re recovering from layoffs, wait 6-8 weeks and outreach when they’re stabilized. Your job description reading will tell you which scenario you’re in.
Can I use tools to automate job description analysis?
Yes. AI can read job descriptions and identify patterns faster than humans. Use it. But validate the findings with secondary sources. AI can misinterpret intent or miss nuance that a human would catch.
What if the company isn’t posting jobs publicly? How do I detect hiring then?
You don’t have visibility into private hiring. This play assumes public job postings. For closed hiring, you’d rely on different signals: employee growth data (estimated from LinkedIn), new LinkedIn profile additions, news announcements, or internal networking.
Is this play still useful if everyone knows about the hiring signal commoditization problem?
Yes. Because most teams still won’t do the work. They’ll talk about the problem while continuing to send “I noticed you’re scaling” messages. Your team will do the work and separate signal from story. That’s the competitive advantage.
How do I handle an account where job postings are down but I think they’re still a good target?
This play is triggered by hiring surges. If hiring is down, use different timing signals: funding rounds, executive changes, M&A activity, news announcements. Not every account is on a hiring surge trajectory. Pick your signals based on account context.
About the Author
Brandon Briggs is a fractional CRO and the founder of It’s Just Revenue. He’s built revenue engines at six companies — including Bold Commerce, Emarsys/SAP, Dotdigital, and Annex Cloud — scaling teams from zero to eight-figure ARR and helping build partner ecosystems north of $250M. He now helps growth-stage companies fix the gap between activity and revenue. Connect on LinkedIn.
Part of the It’s Just Revenue Sales Plays Library — practical frameworks for revenue teams who want to stop the theater and start closing.