Candidate fraud didn’t start in hiring. It migrated from financial services and cybersecurity.
Bottom line
Candidate fraud is following a familiar path. The tactics look less like “recruiting issues” and more like mature fraud patterns that migrated from financial services and cybersecurity into hiring.
Executive summary
In the financial services sector, fraud evolved from opportunistic incidents to organized patterns. In cybersecurity, attackers learned to scale through automation, social engineering, and supply chain weaknesses.
Now, hiring is experiencing the same shift. Remote work, high hiring velocity, and AI-enabled deception lowered the cost of attempting fraud and increased the payoff when it succeeds.
Procurement leaders do not need to become fraud investigators, but they should recognize the trajectory. As fraud matures, it moves from “one-off exceptions” to repeatable schemes. The organizations that respond early create clear norms, clear ownership, and clear escalation.
A short field vignette
A team sees the same pattern across unrelated roles: strong interview performance, inconsistent early delivery, and confusion about who verified what. The issue isn’t that one person lied; it’s that a scalable pattern is probing the process like any other fraud system would.
What procurement should do differently
When fraud migrates into a new domain, the first instinct is to treat it as a local problem. The better move is to apply solid best practices:
- Assume that patterns repeat
- Standardize expectations
- Create a rapid learning loop from incidents
- Train managers on what “normal” looks like (and what doesn’t)
Start here
Treat candidate fraud as a repeatable pattern problem, not an “isolated bad hire problem.” Align internal stakeholders on that shift first.

About the author
Simon Gray, Vice President, Workforce Solutions
With over 25 years of experience in strategic staffing, Simon leads Procom’s Workforce Solutions division to help clients hire quickly and compliantly.

