29 February 2024 · No-Code · Recruitment

Airtable Powered ATS For Lean, Small or Startup Recruitment Agencies

Why I ditched off-the-shelf recruitment CRM software and built my own on Airtable.

Recruitment CRM software has a big problem. Let me explain.

The Problem with Traditional ATS/CRMs

Most recruitment CRMs are clunky, expensive, and force you to work their way. They're designed for enterprise teams with complex hierarchies—not lean operations.

After years of using various platforms, I found they were slowing me down rather than speeding me up.

The features I needed were buried in complex interfaces. The things I actually used were hard to find. And the cost was prohibitive for a lean business.

So I built my own.

Enter Airtable

Airtable allows you to build your own R/ATS. You can use Airtable within the core tables, or you can build custom interfaces to interact with the data.

Not only that, but you can connect it yourself using visual building methods because tools like Make or Zapier integrate seamlessly with Airtable.

You can see why I decided to build my own.

What I Built

I built a custom ATS/CRM that matches exactly how I work. Not how the software developer thought I should work.

Key features include:

What You Can Build

The beauty of Airtable is its flexibility. You can build exactly what you need:

The Lean Advantage

Using Airtable as an ATS is ideal for lean, small, or startup recruitment agencies. You get enterprise-level functionality without the enterprise price tag.

You have control. You can adapt as your process evolves. You're not fighting against software designed for a different type of business.

The cost is a fraction of traditional recruitment CRMs. And the flexibility means you're not locked into someone else's idea of how recruitment should work.

Getting Started

If you're considering building your own system, here's my advice:

The future of recruitment technology isn't one-size-fits-all. It's building what works for you.

Image attribution: Photo by Glenn Carstens-Peters on Unsplash