Best Retail permanent recruitment agencies in Atlanta.
2 retail permanent recruitment agencies operating in Atlanta — verified by us, reviewed by their buyers.
About permanent recruitment
Permanent recruitment is the standard placement model that built the staffing industry: an agency sources a candidate, the client hires them as a permanent W-2 employee, and the agency gets paid a one-time success fee. It's distinct from contingency (which is just an alternative name for the same model when multiple agencies compete on a role) and from retained executive search (where the client pays upfront regardless of outcome). For roles below the C-suite where the candidate pool is reasonably active, permanent recruitment is what gets used.
Pricing is a success fee, typically 15-25% of the placed candidate's first-year base salary, paid 30-90 days after start. A $100k role bills $15-25k; a $150k role bills $22-37k. Niche or in-demand functions (senior software engineering, regulated specialties) can push to 28-30%. Most agencies guarantee the placement for 30-90 days — if the employee leaves or is terminated within the guarantee window, the fee is refunded or a replacement is sourced free. Volume discounts kick in at 5+ committed roles.
The agencies below operate permanent-placement practices across sectors. Volume players (Adecco, Randstad, Allegis) cover most functions; boutiques specialize in one sector (tech, finance, healthcare). For mid-level professional roles where the candidate pool is robust, your in-house TA usually wins on cost. Permanent recruitment shines when speed-to-hire matters more than fee, or when you need access to a passive talent pool your team can't reach.
Permanent recruitment — Frequently Asked Questions
- What's the difference between permanent recruitment and contingency?
- They're the same thing, named differently. 'Permanent recruitment' emphasizes the employment outcome (a permanent W-2 hire); 'contingency' emphasizes the payment model (the agency only gets paid if a hire happens). Some agencies use both terms interchangeably. Both differ from retained search (paid upfront regardless of outcome) and from temp staffing (agency stays the employer of record).
- How much does permanent recruitment cost?
- Standard success fees are 15-25% of the placed candidate's first-year base salary, paid 30-90 days post-start. A $100k hire bills $15-25k. Specialized or in-demand functions (senior engineering, biotech research, finance specialists) can push 28-30%. Volume commitments (5+ placements in a contract window) typically negotiate 2-5 percentage points off retail. Fee includes the search, screening, and (usually) a 30-90 day replacement guarantee.
- What's a placement guarantee and how does it work?
- Most agencies guarantee the placement for 30-90 days from start date. If the employee voluntarily resigns or is terminated for cause within the guarantee window, the agency either refunds the fee in full (pro-rated by days worked is also common), or sources a replacement at no additional charge. The trigger window varies; the structure (refund vs. replacement) varies; the existence of some guarantee is universal in serious agency contracts.
- When does permanent recruitment beat doing the search in-house?
- Three scenarios: (1) The role requires reaching a passive talent pool your team can't credibly approach (niche specialists, competitors' top performers); (2) Speed matters more than fee — an agency with bench candidates can present a slate in days while your team is still scoping the JD; (3) You don't want to spend internal recruiter hours on a one-off role that doesn't justify hiring or training a recruiter. For high-volume, repeatable hiring, in-house wins on cost.
- Can permanent recruitment work for executive roles, or do I need retained search?
- For VP and above, retained search is standard — the candidate pool is more passive, the search needs more research, and the upfront retainer funds that work. Some contingency agencies pitch C-suite or VP placement, but they're typically working with active job-seekers in that band, which is a smaller and weaker pool. For director-level and below, permanent recruitment / contingency is the right model.