Here’s the thing nobody tells you about job boards: they’re a tool, not a strategy.
I’ve watched founders spend a weekend posting their role across six different platforms, then spend the following fortnight wading through 300 CVs that have nothing to do with what they actually need. By the time they’ve done that twice, they’re convinced hiring is broken. It isn’t. The approach is.
After 27 years in recruitment, I can tell you that job boards have a place. But that place is specific, and understanding it will save you a lot of time and a lot of money.
So… What Actually Is a Job Board?
A job board is a platform where you can post vacancies and where people search for a new job. That’s it. At its most basic level, it’s a digital noticeboard.
The ones built for tech and startup hiring – Work in Startups, Wellfound, Otta, and Workable among them – try to go a step further by attracting candidates who are actively interested in earlier-stage companies. They understand that equity packages matter, that ‘flat structure’ isn’t just a buzzword, and that the ability to build from scratch is a genuine skill.
General boards like Indeed and LinkedIn are a different animal. Massive reach. Lower signal. You’ll get volume, but volume isn’t always helpful when you’re a founder with twelve other things on your plate.
The ‘Chemistry Gap’ – Why Job Boards Have a Ceiling
Here’s where I’ll challenge the standard advice.
Job boards are good at generating interest. They are not good at filtering for fit. And for early-stage founding teams, fit is everything.
I call this the Chemistry Gap.
A candidate can have every qualification on your list and still derail the team you’ve spent months building.
Chemistry isn’t a nice-to-have. It’s the thing. And no algorithm – however sophisticated – can assess it for you.
What job boards measure:
- skills listed on a CV,
- location,
- availability,
- salary expectations.
What job boards can’t measure:
- how someone responds under pressure,
- whether their communication style meshes with yours,
- whether they’ll thrive in the scrappy stage you’re in right now.
That second list is what decides whether a hire works out well in your business.
How to Use Job Boards Without Drowning in Applications
If you’re going to use a job board – and sometimes you absolutely should – here’s how to use it well.
Write an honest job advert
Not a wish list.
Not a corporate job spec.
An honest description of what the role involves day-to-day, what stage you’re at, what kind of person thrives in your environment. If you’re pre-revenue, say so. If the role requires someone who’s comfortable with ambiguity, say so.
Clarity upfront filters out the wrong candidates before they even click apply.
Pick the right platform for your role
Wellfound and Otta are genuinely worth using for tech roles in the UK.
LinkedIn is useful if your role has a commercial or senior element.
Indeed will generate volume, so be prepared to invest more time in sifting.
Posting everywhere tends to dilute your signal.
Treat the application stage as the first filter, not the final one
The CV tells you a candidate can do the job on paper.
The conversation tells you whether they belong in your team.
Design your process so that the people who get through the first cut actually go through something meaningful – a brief task, a short call, something that gives you real data before you invest hours in interviews.
When a Job Board Isn’t Enough
If you’re hiring for a role that will have a significant impact on your culture, your revenue, or your direction as a company, a job board alone probably won’t cut it.
Senior hires, first commercial hires, technical leads, and any role where ‘wrong fit’ could cost you six months of momentum – these need more than a passive post.
This is where a Chemistry First approach comes in.
Instead of waiting for the right person to find your advert, you go and find them. You build a targeted shortlist of people who’ve done this before, in comparable environments, and you have a genuine conversation. It’s slower to start and faster to finish.
If you’re not sure whether your next hire warrants that kind of investment, a Hiring Health Check will help you work it out. We’ll look at what the role actually needs, what your process looks like right now, and where the gaps are.
Get a free Hiring Health Check
AUTHOR BIO
Helen Wingrove-Sanders has 27 years of recruitment experience and is the founder of HFBAC. She works with bootstrapped and founder-led UK businesses using her Chemistry First methodology – the belief that the right hire isn’t the best CV in the pile, it’s the right person for this team, at this stage. Find her at hfbac.com.

