Research report · Talent Labs Collaborate London 2026
Most organisations know their candidate experience needs work. What’s far less clear is which problems are universal, which are organisation-specific and where the highest-impact fixes actually lie. We asked 100 talent acquisition leaders – independently, without prompting – and the same challenges surfaced again and again.
100
Talent Acquisition
Leaders
5
Independent
Groups
10
Challenge
Themes Identified
20+
Practitioner
Solutions Hacked
Key finding
The most common candidate experience challenges in UK recruitment are poor communications, process inconsistency, and hiring manager disengagement. These three themes were cited independently by all five practitioner groups in Jobtrain and The Talent Labs’ 2026 research. Expectation management failures and slow or absent feedback were each cited by four of the five groups.
The research took place at Talent Labs Collaborate London on 28th April 2026. Five independent groups of approximately 20 talent acquisition professionals were each asked a single, unprompted question: What is your biggest candidate experience pain point?
Each group voted to identify their top three issues, then worked collaboratively to generate practical solutions. The five groups had no contact with one another throughout. Sessions were facilitated by Giles Heckstall-Smith (Director of Strategic Development) and Gary Towers (Director of Talent Intelligence) from Jobtrain.
The methodology matters. The emergence of the same themes, independently, across all five sessions is not a coincidence or an artefact of group dynamics. It reflects what talent acquisition professionals across the UK actually experience — and what they believe is genuinely broken.
The following challenges were identified across the five sessions. How many independent groups raised each theme is noted — it’s the clearest signal of universality.
Challenge frequency — groups citing each theme (out of 5)
Communications
5/5
Consistency
5/5
Hiring manager engagement
4/5
Expectation management
4/5
Feedback loop
4/5
Time & resource
3/5
Lack of automation
3/5
Accessibility & inclusion
2/5
AI perception & sentiment
1/5
Cited by all 5 groups
Cited by 4 of 5 groups
Cited by 3 of 5 groups
Cited by 1–2 groups
The pattern behind the challenges
Most candidate experience failures aren’t four separate problems – they’re symptoms of two upstream causes.
Get the full report – free
All ten themes, 20+ solutions, and five priority actions to take right now.
Candidate experience is not a new topic. The challenges identified here – slow communications, disengaged hiring managers, inconsistent processes – have been discussed in talent acquisition circles for years. What makes the 2026 findings significant is their consistency.
One hundred practitioners, working independently across five groups, surfaced the same issues without prompting. CIPD’s annual resourcing surveys have long highlighted candidate communications as a persistent weak point. LinkedIn Talent Insights data consistently shows candidate drop-off rising as process length increases. The 2026 Jobtrain and Talent Labs research adds practitioner texture to what the data already suggests: the fundamentals are being missed, at scale, across the UK market.
For talent acquisition leaders, the practical implication is that improvement does not require exceptional effort or significant investment. It requires doing the basics consistently – and the research identifies exactly what those basics are.
Download free
The 2026 candidate experience report – all ten themes, 20+ solutions
Research from 100 talent acquisition professionals. Findings you can benchmark against. Practical actions you can take this week.
Download the report ⬇️
Based on independent research with 100 UK talent acquisition professionals in 2026, the most common challenges are: poor communications (all five independent groups), process inconsistency (all five groups), hiring manager disengagement (four groups), expectation management failures (four groups), and slow or absent candidate feedback (four groups).
Employer brand is the reputation an organisation builds among prospective candidates before someone applies. Candidate experience is what actually happens once someone enters the process. The two are directly connected — a poor candidate experience undermines employer brand regardless of how strong the brand-building activity is. The 2026 research found the gap between what organisations promise and what they deliver was one of the most frequently cited pain points.
The 2026 research suggests candidate experience failures are structural rather than incidental. The same upstream issues — hiring manager accountability and underuse of automation — drive most of the symptoms. Organisations that address individual symptoms without fixing these structural causes tend to see limited sustained improvement.
Three of the five independent groups cited lack of automation as a significant challenge. Critically, practitioners identified this not as a technology gap but as an adoption failure. Most organisations already have ATS capabilities to automate key communications and touchpoints. The problem is underuse — and addressing it does not require new technology, just better configuration and process discipline.
The research involved talent acquisition professionals from a wide range of UK sectors and organisation sizes at Talent Labs Collaborate London 2026. The consistency of findings across independent groups indicates these challenges are not sector-specific — they reflect common patterns across UK recruitment practice.
Candidate experience in talent acquisition refers to how a job applicant perceives every interaction with an employer throughout the recruitment process — from the initial job advert through to offer, rejection or onboarding. It covers communication quality, process transparency, feedback speed and whether the employer’s stated values match the reality of the process.
The report covers the ten most frequently cited candidate experience challenges in talent acquisition, as identified by 100 TA leaders in independent hackathon sessions. Each theme includes an analysis of the specific pain points raised and the practical solutions generated by the groups.
The research is relevant to anyone working in talent acquisition, HR or recruitment operations. The practitioners involved worked across a wide range of UK sectors and organisation sizes. The challenges that emerged were consistent across all of them.
About Jobtrain
We’re a UK-based, AI-powered applicant tracking system trusted by 200+ organisations, with over 25 years of experience in recruitment technology. We facilitated this research because we believe the talent acquisition community benefits from honest, practitioner-led data.
About The Talent Labs
The UK’s leading community for talent professionals, with 2,000+ members and 15 years of experience supporting talent acquisition, management and development teams through events, research and training.