May 9, 2026
Why You’re Not Seeing the Best Talent in Central California

If your hiring runs through HR and online job boards, the top 1% of people in your market are invisible to you.
I’m not talking about candidates who look polished on paper. I mean the people who actually drive revenue, keep operations from sliding sideways, and make the rest of the team better just by being in the room. Those people aren’t applying to your req. They’re not posting “open to work.” A lot of them barely log into LinkedIn. They’re heads-down at the company they’re already at.
And missing them costs more than owners think.
What a “decent” hire really runs you
You hire a finance manager at $120K. Resume’s strong, interview goes well, culture fit. Six months in you can tell — they’re fine. Not fireable. Not someone who’s going to push the business anywhere either.
Add it up:
- Six months of salary and benefits: about $75,000
- Lost productivity and the deals or decisions they didn’t move on: $50K to $150K
- Drag on the team (rework, leadership time spent managing them, morale): $25K and up
- Replacing them once you finally pull the trigger: another $30K to $60K
You’re $180K to $310K in on one mediocre hire.
A top 1% person in that same seat is a different story. They spot $200K of waste a year. Their reports are clean enough that you actually trust them to make decisions on. The other strong people on your team stop polishing their resumes because they finally have a peer. You get your evenings back.
It’s not a hire. It’s a multiplier.
Why your current model can’t reach them
HR isn’t the problem here. The system they’re handed is.
Internal recruiting is built for volume, speed, and compliance. It isn’t built to find someone who’s already great at their job and has zero reason to leave. So you end up pulling from the same pool every other company in Fresno is pulling from, rewarding people who are actively looking instead of people who are actively winning, and judging by resume bullets instead of reputation.
It’s an efficient process. It just isn’t the one that gets you the best person.
How the top 1% actually move
They don’t behave like job seekers. They’re loyal to where they are. They ignore generic recruiter pings (rightly). They take a call when somebody they already trust is on the other end, and basically never before that. They’re open to the right opportunity, but that opportunity almost never arrives in their inbox.
If you’re not reaching them on purpose, somebody else is.
Getting in front of them takes credibility in the market, relationships you’ve built over years, and the ability to frame an opportunity in a way that makes sense to somebody who wasn’t even looking that morning. That’s not a job board doing the work. That’s a relationship doing the work.
Where Stardom comes in
We don’t sit in the same lane as your HR team. We’ve spent years building off-market relationships with the people we know are quietly worth talking to. We know which of them are locked in and which would actually pick up the phone for the right call. And when the conversation happens, we know how to position what you’re offering so it actually lands.
We get you in front of people your internal pipeline will never see.
The honest question
Is your hiring built around who’s visible, or around who would actually change the trajectory of your business?
Because if it depends on who applies online, you’re not competing for the best people in Central California. You’re competing for the most available ones, and those are very different groups.
A bad hire costs you money, momentum, and basically a year of your team’s progress. A great one buys all of that back. The top 1% aren’t ignoring you. They’re just not where you’re looking for them.
If you’re serious about the next chapter of your company, it’s worth being honest with yourself about whether your current way of hiring is actually built for it.
#ThrivingCentralCaliforniaCompanies
Want to talk through it? Call me.
— Lorenzo Ramirez