
Cannabis companies are drowning in applicants and starving for clarity. High Times Recruiting adds a simple layer that makes the first round faster, more human and easier to get right.
Cannabis companies do not struggle to find applicants. They struggle to quickly spot who is actually a fit. The industry moves fast, runs on thin teams and still has to operate inside a regulatory box that does not care how understaffed you are. When a role opens up, hiring becomes a second job, and it usually lands on the same people who are already running ops, sales, compliance, cultivation schedules and inventory headaches.
That is why the first interview has become the bottleneck. Not because interviews are bad, but because the first round is often just sorting. You are trying to confirm basics: can this person communicate clearly, do they understand the pace, are they professional, do they stay steady when things get hectic? A resume rarely answers those questions. It can suggest experience, but it cannot show you how someone shows up.
High Times Recruiting is built around a simple premise: let hiring managers see candidates as people before they spend time scheduling calls. The service sends applicants with both a resume and a short, one way video introduction, usually two to four minutes. The goal is a faster read on communication, presence and role fit, so your live interviews are reserved for the candidates you actually want to meet.
More details are available at hightimesrecruiting.com.
The frustrating part is that most hiring managers already know quickly whether a conversation is going anywhere. The issue is that you still spend the time anyway. You stay on the call, you ask the polite questions, you take the notes, you try to be fair, and then you hang up and move to the next one. That is not a hiring strategy. That is a time tax.
The model is designed for cannabis roles across the supply chain, including retail, cultivation, manufacturing, distribution and brands. It also leans into something traditional recruiting often misses. Cannabis is not just another industry category. Compliance, workflow pressure and culture are real filters here. You can have someone who looks perfect on paper but has never operated inside a regulated store, never worked a harvest schedule, never handled the pace of a scaling brand team, or simply cannot communicate in a way that keeps things steady when the day gets chaotic. The earlier you identify that, the less time you waste.
Operationally, the system plugs into major job marketplaces, including Indeed and LinkedIn, and turns inbound interest into a curated batch you can review quickly. Each candidate includes a resume and a brief video intro. You review, pick your favorites, then move them into live interviews. High Times Recruiting says it delivers the first batch of qualified candidates within 72 hours and that the average time to hire can be about two weeks once the pipeline is moving.
The pricing is also structured differently from traditional recruiting. Instead of taking a percentage of salary, the model is a flat fee per successful placement, with payment only when a hire is made. The current fee is $2,500 per placement, plus job post boosts that typically run $500 to $1,000, depending on the role and visibility needs. In a market where traditional recruiters often take 20% to 25% of annual salary, a flat fee approach aims to make recruiting feel more like a predictable operating cost and less like a gamble.
At its core, this is a bet on time. If you can sort faster, you can hire faster. If you hire faster, you do not drag a team through months of being short-staffed. And in cannabis, that gap is where compliance slips, customers notice, production schedules drift and good people burn out.
Learn more at hightimesrecruiting.com.

