In this article
Welcome to the world of recruitment & tech
Whether you like people, sales, and the tech world, or you want a well-paid, high-earning recruitment specialism, this guide covers what an IT recruiter actually does, the skills, the day-to-day, and the honest upsides and downsides.
General description
An IT (tech) recruiter sources, screens, and places technology professionals into jobs. In simple terms: they find and place the developers and tech pros companies need. Think of them as the matchmakers of tech talent.
- Source and attract tech talent
- Screen and assess candidates
- Match developers to roles
- Manage the hiring process
Key skills & qualifications
Hard skills
Soft skills
- People skills โ recruitment is relationships
- Drive โ commission rewards the relentless
- Tech grasp โ understanding the roles
- Resilience โ not every placement lands
- Communication โ candidates and clients
- Speed โ scarce talent moves fast
Education & qualifications
No degree required โ IT recruitment rewards drive, people skills, and tech knowledge over qualifications, with many recruiters from varied backgrounds.
Typical responsibilities
- Sourcing โ finding tech talent
- Screening โ assessing candidates
- Matching โ to tech roles
- Relationships โ clients and candidates
- Negotiation โ closing placements
- Process โ managing hiring
Responsibilities by seniority
Resourcer / Junior
0โ2 years
- Sources tech candidates
- Learns the market
- Builds a pipeline
- Hitting first placements
- Toward owning roles
IT Recruiter
2โ6 years
- Owns the full process
- Places tech talent
- Builds relationships
- Strong commission
- Specialising
Senior / Manager / Owner
6+ years
- High-value placements
- Or leads a team
- Or runs an agency
- Mentors recruiters
- Toward leadership
Where IT recruiters work
๐ป Tech recruitment agencies
Specialist tech hiring.
๐ข In-house tech
Company tech teams.
โ๏ธ Cloud / data / AI
Hot specialisms.
๐ฎ Games / startups
Fast-growth tech.
๐ Remote / global
Tech talent anywhere.
๐ Own agency
Independent recruitment.
A day in the life
Sourcing developers for a hard-to-fill role โ hunting scarce tech talent across platforms.
Screening and interviewing candidates, assessing skills and fit for tech roles.
Working with a client to understand exactly the tech skills they need, then matching them.
Negotiating an offer and closing a placement โ the moment the relationship-building pays off.
Talent sourced, developers placed, tech teams built. Matchmaking the tech world. That's the job.
What this job gives you
- Well-paid, high-earning
- Hot, in-demand specialism
- People-focused
- No degree needed
- Strong commission
Pros & cons
โ Advantages
- Well-paid, high-earning
- Hot, in-demand specialism
- People-focused
- No degree needed
- Strong commission potential
- Remote and freelance-friendly
- Path to agency ownership
โ Disadvantages
- Target and commission pressure
- Rejection and competition
- Income can be variable
- Scarce talent is hard to find
- Fast-paced and demanding
- Always chasing placements
Salary potential โ global rating
Rated against all professions globally, where โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ = top 1% earners:
Career growth paths
- Senior IT Recruiter โ own high-value roles
- Recruitment Manager โ lead a team
- Tech Talent Lead โ in-house tech hiring
- Agency Owner โ run your own firm
- Specialist (AI, cloud) โ hot niche recruitment
- Talent Acquisition โ broaden into TA
IT Recruiter vs related roles
Here's how some neighbouring roles compare.
| Role | Core focus | Note | Pay | Entry |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IT Recruiter You are here | Places tech talent | Tech sourcing, recruitment | Baseline | Accessible |
| Recruiter | Matches people to jobs | Sourcing, people | Lower-similar | Accessible |
| HR Generalist | Handles broad HR | HR practices | Lower-similar | Medium |
| Account Manager | Grows client relationships | Relationships | Similar | Medium |
| B2B Sales Specialist | Sells business-to-business | B2B selling | Similar | Accessible |
Scroll the table sideways on mobile. Pay comparisons are directional and vary by market and seniority.
Future outlook
The shortage of tech talent and the constant demand for developers keep IT recruiters in strong, high-earning demand, with the best commanding top commission in recruitment.
- Tech talent shortage drives demand
- Developers are always in demand
- Specialist recruiters earn well
- Remote hiring widens the market
- Strong, high-earning demand
Fun facts ๐ค
Tech talent is so scarce that good IT recruiters are highly sought-after.
IT recruitment offers some of the strongest commission in the industry.
Understanding the tech sets the best IT recruiters apart.
It's wide open โ recruiters come from all backgrounds, no degree needed.
Hot specialisms like AI and cloud recruitment are especially lucrative.
Myths about this role
"Recruiters just forward CVs."
โ They source scarce talent, assess fit, negotiate, and manage the whole process.
"You need to be technical."
โ Tech knowledge helps, but people and sales skills matter most.
"It's not a real career."
โ It leads to management, talent leadership, and agency ownership.
"There's no money in it."
โ IT recruitment offers some of the strongest commission anywhere.
"AI will replace it."
โ AI helps source, but judging fit and persuading people stays human.
Is this job right for you?
โ Good fit if you...
- Like people and the tech world
- Are driven by targets
- Are resilient to rejection
- Want strong earning potential
- Have or want tech knowledge
- Want an accessible specialism
โ Maybe not for you if...
- You dislike targets and commission
- You can't handle rejection
- You want guaranteed salary only
- You're not a people person
- You dislike fast-paced work
- You dislike the tech world
High-earning specialism
IT recruitment is a well-paid, high-earning, in-demand recruitment specialism, where tech knowledge and a relentless hunt for scarce talent translate into some of the strongest commission anywhere.
โ Advantages
- Well-paid, high-earning
- Hot, in-demand specialism
- People-focused
- No degree needed
- Path to agency ownership
โ Challenges
- Target and commission pressure
- Rejection and competition
- Income can be variable
- Scarce talent is hard to find
- Always chasing placements
How to get started
- Get into recruitment often as a resourcer โ no degree needed.
- Build tech knowledge understand the roles and skills.
- Source and screen tech talent find and assess scarce candidates.
- Own the process place developers and build relationships.
- Advance or go independent management, niche, or your own agency.
What to know before you start
- It's sourcing scarce talent, not just forwarding CVs
- Tech knowledge helps but people skills matter most
- No degree needed โ drive and results matter
- It offers some of the strongest commission in recruitment
- The tech talent shortage drives demand
- It leads to management and agency ownership
From the field
The same lessons come up again and again from people actually doing the job:
People think recruiters just forward CVs. In tech, the talent is so scarce that the real skill is hunting down developers who aren't even looking, understanding the tech well enough to assess them, and persuading them to move. It's a relentless, skilled hunt.
IT recruiter ยท 5 years in
The commission is the draw โ IT recruitment pays some of the best in the industry because the demand for tech talent is insatiable. I came in with no degree, learned the tech, and now I out-earn a lot of the developers I place.
Senior IT recruiter ยท 8 years in
Specialising in a hot niche โ AI, cloud, cybersecurity โ is where it gets really lucrative. Companies are desperate for those skills and there aren't enough people. A specialist recruiter who knows that market is genuinely golden.
Agency owner ยท 12 years in