It assumes you already know what the role does. What you need is a system: where to post, what to ask in fifteen minutes, what to ignore on a resume, and what has to be ready before the new hire walks in on Day 1 so they actually walk in on Day 2.
The U.S. hourly labor pool is shrinking, not growing — the prime-age participation rate has plateaued and quits are still elevated.1
The strongest predictor of a hire showing up on Day 1 is how few days passed between application and offer.2
Job posts that name a real wage range attract roughly twice the qualified applicants of "competitive pay" posts.3
What the hourly hiring funnel actually looks like
Before you start posting, calibrate your expectations. For most hourly roles in a metro market, the funnel from posting to floor-ready looks roughly like this. Your numbers will vary by trade and city, but the shape — a steep fall-off at screen and a second one at offer-acceptance — is universal.
Typical hourly funnel, posting to Day 1
Most operators lose the largest share between "applied" and "reachable" — usually because they wait more than 24 hours to respond.
The 7-day sprint board
Treat the next week like a kanban board. Three columns, eight cards. Run it from the top of your phone — do not try to keep it in your head, and do not try to keep it in your inbox. The point is that no step ever stalls because you "got busy."
Days 1–2
Post and respond
Days 3–5
Interview and decide
Days 6–7
Get them ready for Day 1
Writing a job post that doesn't bury the lead
Most hourly job posts open with the company "founded in 1987" and bury the wage on a fifth scroll. Candidates leave before they get there. Use four short blocks, in this order, with the wage range above the fold. The annotated mock below is the structure we recommend — you can paste it straight into Indeed, ZipRecruiter, Facebook, or your own careers page.
1Line Cook — Mornings, $20–$23/hr
2Tuesdays through Saturdays, 6 AM–2 PM. Closed Sundays and Mondays. Tips pooled. Free shift meal.
3What you'll actually do: prep the cold line, run breakfast plates with one other cook, and reset for lunch by 11. We run a small menu, fast, and clean.
4How to apply: text "MORNINGS" to (555) 555–0102 and we'll get back to you the same day. No résumé required; we'll ask three questions and set up a quick visit.
Title with shift and pay
Three pieces of information a candidate needs before they tap the post. Lead with all three.
Hours, schedule, perks — in plain English
Days off, tips, meals, transit. The boring, true stuff that decides whether someone applies.
The actual work, in one paragraph
Not corporate values. Not "fast-paced team player." What the first three hours of a shift look like.
An apply path that takes 30 seconds
A text or a short form. Anything that requires a résumé upload from a phone is a filter you don't want.
Where to actually post in 2026
You don't need a posting strategy. You need two channels you'll respond to within two hours. Below are the six worth your time for most hourly roles; pick the two that fit your trade and your zip code, and ignore the rest until they fail you.
Indeed & ZipRecruiter
Highest raw volume. Best for front-line roles where you can afford to screen 20 to find 2.
Facebook Local & Marketplace
Surprisingly strong for hospitality, retail, and home services. Free, fast, hyper-local.
Employee referrals
Highest show-rate and longest tenure. A $200 bonus per kept-90-days hire pays for itself.
A "Now Hiring" sign in the window
Still works. People who already shop or eat with you tend to interview well and stick.
Trade schools & community colleges
For licensed roles (CNA, electrician, food handler), the placement office is the best channel you'll find.
Your own past applicants
The fastest channel of all. Someone you didn't hire last spring is probably available right now.
The 15-minute phone screen
The phone screen is not an interview. It is a filter. Three questions, fifteen minutes total, same script for everyone. If you skip it, you'll spend an hour in person with someone you would have ruled out in three minutes on the phone.
The three-question screen, word for word
Total budget: 15 minutes. Keep notes on a single page so you can compare candidates side by side later in the week.
"Thanks for applying. Quick — are you still looking? And when could you start?"
Listen for: a specific date. "Whenever" is a soft yes. "Next week" is a hard yes. "I'm waiting to hear from another place" is fine — ask which day they'll know.
"Tell me about your last job — what did a normal shift look like, and why are you leaving?"
Listen for: specifics (tasks, hours, tools, names) versus generalities. A candidate who can describe a real shift in three sentences is usually who they say they are.
"Here's what this job looks like in the first month. [Read the post back to them, plainly.] What part of that gives you pause?"
Listen for: honest hesitation. "Early mornings are hard for me" is more valuable than "sounds great!" because it surfaces the no-show risk before you've scheduled anyone.
"Two openings this week for an in-person — Wednesday at 10 or Thursday at 2. Which works?"
Listen for: commitment. Don't offer five slots; offer two. A candidate who can't pick one is unlikely to make it to either.
In the room: what to look for, what to ignore
A 30-minute in-person is not enough time to assess "fit." It is enough time to spot two or three signals that predict whether someone shows up on Day 14. Train yourself to track the right ones.
Green flags
Predicts a 90-day stay
- Showed up early or on time, with the address right.
- Asked at least one specific question about the schedule, the pay structure, or who they'd be working alongside.
- Described a prior conflict at work as something they learned from, not something done to them.
- Knew within a day or two when they could start, and meant it.
- Had a follow-up question after you sent the offer — usually about logistics, parking, dress code, lunch.
Red flags
Worth a second look — or a pass
- Couldn't name their last supervisor or last regular shift time.
- Wanted to start "as soon as possible" but was vague every time you tried to pin a date.
- Spoke about every prior employer as the problem — no exceptions, no nuance.
- Asked about time-off policy before asking what the job is.
- Went dark for more than 48 hours between any two steps. Ghosting before Day 1 almost always predicts ghosting after.
After "yes": the Day-1 handoff
The week between offer and start is the danger zone. National data shows roughly one in five offer-accepters never makes it to Day 1, and the leading reason is a quiet handoff — no schedule sent, no welcome text, no clarity about what to bring.4 Close that gap with three small moves on the same day you make the offer.
Where Teamsly helps after they say yes
None of this is a hiring system — it's the operational layer that turns an accepted offer into a clocked-in shift. Every feature below is part of Teamsly's flat per-location plan.
Common questions, answered fast
Is "hire in seven days" realistic for a one-location operator?
For most front-line hourly roles in a metro market, yes — if you commit to the response-time discipline. The single biggest reason it stretches to three or four weeks is not the candidate pool. It's the operator taking 48–72 hours to reply, then trying to schedule interviews around their own week instead of the candidate's. The sprint works when "first text in 2 hours" is non-negotiable.
How much should I pay to compete in 2026?
Anchor to the actual median in your zip code for the role, not the federal minimum wage. Indeed and ZipRecruiter both publish a real-time range for the title and the city. Match the median floor on the low end of your range and post it. A range that starts below the city median is the most expensive line you can put in your post — it filters out the candidates you would have hired and attracts the ones who don't have other options.
Do I really need to text? Can't I just email?
You can, but the open rate is roughly a third. For hourly hiring in 2026, text is the channel; email is the file cabinet. A simple two-line text within two hours of an application converts roughly two to three times better than an email sent the next morning.
What about retention — how do I keep them past Day 90?
Retention is mostly decided in the first three weeks. The single highest-leverage move is a structured 30-60-90 plan instead of an unstructured "ramp." See our 30-60-90 onboarding template for the manager script. For the labor-cost math behind keeping a good hire long enough to pay back the recruit, see reducing labor costs without cutting hours.
Run the Day-1 handoff from the same app that runs the schedule
Teamsly publishes the new hire's first week to their phone in English or Spanish, sends the safety quiz before they walk in, captures forms with photo evidence, and gives you an audit trail of every change. Flat per-location pricing — no per-seat fees as you grow.
- U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics — Labor Force Statistics from the Current Population Survey; Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS), 2024–2026 monthly releases. Prime-age (25–54) labor-force participation and quits-rate series. bls.gov/cps, bls.gov/jlt.
- SHRM (Society for Human Resource Management), Talent Acquisition Benchmarking, most recent annual report; supported by Greenhouse and Workable hiring-velocity studies. Time-to-fill and offer-to-accept conversion data for hourly and front-line roles. shrm.org.
- Indeed Hiring Lab and ZipRecruiter Market Reports, 2023–2025 analyses of job-post performance with and without disclosed wage ranges; consistent with state pay-transparency-law impact studies from Colorado, California, and New York. hiringlab.org.
- Robert Half / SHRM new-hire engagement surveys, 2023–2025, on the share of accepted offers that do not result in a Day-1 start; consistent with Indeed Hiring Lab reporting on "renege" rates for hourly roles. Operator-side practices that reduce the gap include same-day written offer, scheduled welcome contact, and pre-Day-1 paperwork.
