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Frontline Hiring Is a P&L Problem And Here's the Proof

June 10, 2026
7 min read
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Frontline hiring has never been a purely operational concern. But for too long, it’s been treated like one. That changes when a CHRO and a CFO sit down together and trace exactly how an unfilled store associate role shows up in gross margin, customer satisfaction, and enterprise value. 

That was the focus of a recent ICIMS executive webinar featuring Mauricio Marrero, a CHRO with leadership experience at Miniso, Heineken, Starbucks and The Cheesecake Factory, alongside Marc Thompson, CEO at ICIMS. Their discussion makes one thing clear: frontline hiring is a direct driver of business performance, not just an HR function.  

What does it mean when a frontline role goes unfilled? 

The leadership takeaway: It’s a revenue problem, not a recruiting one. 

In businesses with large frontline teams, those employees effectively are the product or service; they’re central to how value is delivered. As Thompson explained, an unfilled frontline role doesn’t just create a gap, it results in revenue that’s lost for good. Unlike a delayed enterprise deal, there’s no opportunity to recover it later so the shift goes uncovered, the customer isn’t served and the moment is gone. 

Under-staffing also hits gross margin directly, which is why frontline headcount shows up on the metrics boards executives track daily, not just in HR dashboards. When the vacancy rate becomes structural rather than a short-term blip, it moves from an HR inconvenience to a CFO priority, fast. 

For TA leaders and CHROs, the implication is clear: frontline staffing has outgrown what traditional HR metrics can fully capture or communicate on their own. 

Why does the language you use in the boardroom change the outcome? 

The leadership takeaway: Stop presenting frontline hiring as an HR efficiency play. Frame it as a revenue and margin play, as that’s the language CFOs and boards respond to. 

Marrero saw this firsthand during a period of aggressive, multi-country expansion, when new stores were opening almost every week. The existing recruiting model simply couldn’t keep up with the pace. Internal teams quickly fell behind, forcing the business to rely heavily on external agencies, while travel and operational costs climbed. Most critically, many stores opened their doors without fully staffed teams, putting immediate pressure on performance from day one. 

The fix was for a different conversation to be held, instead of a better process. 

Rather than presenting a staffing problem, Marrero built the business case in financial terms — translating each unfilled position into an exact dollar amount of lost revenue or constrained operational capacity. That reframe moved the discussion from the HR budget to the enterprise investment agenda. It also meant building cross-functionally: the CFO, COO and CIO were all part of shaping and presenting the case. 

As Thompson confirmed: a CHRO who walks in with the business problem quantified (revenue loss per day, cost per uncovered shift, delayed store opening timelines) is a CHRO who gets the budget approved. 

What happened when one company replaced 40 recruiters with 4? 

After implementing ICIMS Frontline AI, a high-volume hiring solution built on its enterprise ATS, Marrero’s team went into their peak Christmas hiring season with a leaner, more strategic model. The result? 

What had previously required 40-plus full-time recruiters, multiple staffing agencies and significant travel overhead was accomplished by four HR Business Partners, who successfully staffed existing stores for the season in a single week. 

The operational shift was significant. But the strategic shift was more important. Freed from transactional volume, the HR team moved into higher-value work: 

  • Analyzing compensation competitiveness by market 
  • Tracking candidate drop-off rates by city to identify friction points 
  • Understanding which candidate profiles were staying — and which were churning 

HR stopped being the department everyone blamed when stores were understaffed. It became the function that owned the data and used it to change the conversation at the executive table. 

How does getting the candidate profile right protect margins over time? 

The leadership takeaway: Getting the right profile is not a one-time hiring decision. As your business strategy shifts from growth to optimization and from expansion to efficiency, your frontline talent profile needs to shift with it. The organizations that see this in their data are the ones that act on it. 

One of the more striking insights from the webinar was how Frontline AI changed not just hiring speed but hiring quality and how that quality compounds over time. 

During rapid expansion, Marrero’s organization hired what he called the “cowboy” profile: high-energy, get-it-done candidates who thrived in chaos. It made sense when new stores needed to open fast. But as expansion wrapped and the business shifted toward operational discipline, those same candidates started leaving. The profile that built the stores was not the profile that ran them efficiently. 

The data coming out of Frontline AI made the issue hard to ignore. It showed that the team had been hiring for the wrong profile and once they shifted toward candidates who were more structured and process-oriented, early turnover began to fall noticeably. Within a few months, it had improved to the point where turnover was no longer a recurring topic in executive discussions. 

Thompson expanded on why this carries so much weight at the board level, emphasizing that fully staffing the frontline with the right people is ultimately a driver of durable revenue growth — not just a lever for cost reduction. When turnover is lower, teams become more experienced, which naturally leads to stronger customer interactions.  

Over time, that translates into higher conversion rates, better retention and increased customer lifetime value. These aren’t isolated gains; they build on one another, creating a compounding effect that can materially shift how the business is valued. 

How should CHROs frame frontline AI when presenting to the board? 

In many boardroom conversations, the mention of “frontline AI” tends to steer the discussion quickly toward headcount reduction and cost savings. Thompson argues that this instinct, while understandable, is too narrow and not the most effective way to frame the opportunity from the outset. 

The more accurate and compelling framing is value creation. Specifically, the compounding effect of better staffing on revenue continuity, customer experience and enterprise value. That’s the argument which boards are most motivated to act on. 

For CHROs preparing to make this case, here are the principles that came through clearly in the conversation: 

  • Lead with the business problem, not the solution. That means putting real numbers behind the status quo whether it’s lost revenue from unfilled roles, rising overtime and agency costs, or delays in opening new locations. This is so that the impact is fully understood before introducing the technology. 
  • Translate HR metrics into financial metrics. On its own, time to hire may not carry much weight with a CFO, but when you tie it to something like a store opening timeline and quantify the revenue lost for each day of delay, it becomes far more meaningful and harder to ignore. 
  • Build the case cross-functionally. Finance, operations and IT should all be at the table when the business case is shaped, not just presented to. 
  • Frame AI as a process accelerator, not a decision-maker. Conversational AI handles application intake, screening, scheduling and pipeline management. Humans make every hiring decision. That distinction matters for risk-averse boards evaluating AI investment. 

The organizations that win on frontline talent are not the ones that hire the most. They’re the ones that move the fastest with the right people — and can show the board exactly what that speed is worth. 

For the C-suite, this is a test of execution because can your frontline hiring system keep pace with your business strategy? And if it cannot, is that showing up in your P&L? 

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About the author

Trent Cotton

Trent Cotton is the Head of Talent Insights and Analyst Relations at iCIMS, where he empowers recruiting organizations with data-driven strategies to hire smarter and faster. With over 20 years of experience as an HR and Talent executive, Trent is known for translating complex workforce trends into clear, actionable insights that drive business results.

He is the author of the books High Performance Recruiting and Sprint Recruiting, which provide practical frameworks for transforming recruiting into a high-impact function. Passionate about bridging data with human decision-making, Trent continues to challenge traditional recruiting models and champion innovative approaches that meet the demands of today’s talent economy.

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