The 6 Qualities That Matter Most
After thousands of placements, these are the traits that separate the best recruiters from the rest.
Pay Transparency
A great recruiter shows you the full pay breakdown — bill rate, hourly, stipends, and agency margin. If they dodge this question, walk away.
Responsiveness
You should never wait days for a callback. The best recruiters respond within hours, even evenings and weekends when you need them.
Specialty Knowledge
A recruiter who understands PT vs. OT vs. SLP settings can match you to the right facility. Generic healthcare recruiters often miss the mark.
Contract Advocacy
When issues arise mid-contract — and they will — your recruiter should go to bat for you with the facility, not just side with the client.
Credentialing Support
Licensure, compliance docs, background checks — a good recruiter handles the paperwork so you can focus on patient care.
Long-Term Relationship
The best recruiters think beyond one placement. They help you plan your career, not just fill a slot.
Recruiter Red Flags
If you notice any of these, start talking to other agencies.
⚠️ Won't share the bill rate
If a recruiter refuses to tell you what the facility is paying, they're hiding a large margin.
⚠️ Pressures you to accept quickly
"This job will be gone tomorrow" is usually a tactic. Good jobs exist every week.
⚠️ Disappears after placement
A recruiter who goes silent once you start your assignment won't be there when problems arise.
⚠️ Vague about contract terms
Cancellation clauses, guaranteed hours, overtime policies — if they can't explain these clearly, that's a problem.
⚠️ Doesn't know your discipline
If your recruiter can't explain the difference between SNF and outpatient settings, they lack the expertise to place you well.
⚠️ Only offers one pay option
Good recruiters present multiple pay structure options. A single take-it-or-leave-it offer suggests inflexibility.
10 Questions to Ask Before Signing
Interview your recruiter the same way they interview you.
What is the bill rate for this assignment, and how is my pay package calculated from it?
What happens if my contract gets cancelled? What's the cancellation policy and notice period?
Are my hours guaranteed? What if the facility sends me home early or the census drops?
How do you handle issues that come up mid-contract? Can you give me an example?
What benefits do you offer — health insurance, 401k, CEU reimbursement, PTO?
How many therapists are you currently working with? Can I talk to one of them?
What's the average tenure of therapists who work with your agency?
Do you offer both company housing and a housing stipend? What are the rates?
How do you help with multi-state licensure and credentialing?
How quickly can you typically place me once I'm compliant and ready to go?
Real Recruiter Experiences
Recruiter Questions Answered
2–3 is ideal. Enough to compare pay packages for the same jobs, but not so many that you can't maintain good relationships.
Yes, be upfront. Good recruiters respect transparency and will compete on pay and service. Recruiters who get upset about this are showing a red flag.
Ask for a different recruiter. Most agencies will accommodate this. Your recruiter relationship is too important to settle.
Often the opposite. Smaller agencies tend to have recruiters with lower caseloads who can give you more personalized attention. The trade-off is fewer job listings, but the quality of support is often higher.
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