Friday 15 Podcast

Who Is Your Next Hire? Why the Old Hiring Playbook Is Being Rewritten

Brian Beck and Andy Hoar on a web where bots now outnumber humans, a labor market stuck in a low-hire, low-fire pattern, and a hiring question that has shifted from which person to hire to how to solve the need.

Friday 15 Podcast

Key takeaways

  • Bot and AI-agent traffic now makes up the majority of web requests, according to Cloudflare, which changes how buyers discover and evaluate products and raises the stakes for answer-engine visibility.
  • The US labor market is in a sustained low-hire, low-fire pattern, with layoffs and voluntary quits both near historic lows, so getting new headcount approved is harder than it has been in years.
  • The practical hiring question has shifted from which person to hire to how to solve the need, with full-time hires, fractional experts, contractors, and AI agents all on the table.
  • Marketing, customer insight, data, and AI are the gaps teams are most focused on, driven by buyers moving research and discovery to answer engines.
  • Experience managing people, processes, and now agents is increasingly what teams hire for, which is part of why leadership-leverage roles are valued over routine task execution.

The web just crossed a bot versus human line

Brian opened with the number that has been making the rounds: Cloudflare data showing that automated bots and AI agents now account for 57.4% of web requests, against 42.6% from humans. Andy’s read was that this is a real shift and a permanent one.

Bot traffic has overtaken human traffic and will never go back. That I think we can say with 100% certainty.

Andy Hoar, Master B2B

Both hosts added the caveat that matters for anyone reading the headline. A large share of that automated traffic is low value, and the figure measures HTTP requests to pages rather than human attention or time spent. By engagement measures, people are still the dominant presence online. What is changing is the buying journey, with more research, comparison, and discovery handled by answer engines, so a single human question can trigger an AI agent to visit thousands of pages. Andy and Brian connected this to the flood of AI-generated content showing up on LinkedIn and across the web, much of it produced to rank inside answer engines. Brian called it the “sloptimization” of the internet.

Why trusted communities gain value as content multiplies

The hosts’ through line was that as machine-generated content grows, people put a higher premium on sources they can trust. Brian framed Master B2B’s practitioner forum as one answer to that, a gated space where the questions and answers come from real working practitioners.

People are going to look for places where they can have a trusted conversation with others, and they know it is genuine.

Brian Beck, Master B2B

Andy drew a distinction between what he called least common denominator forums, general spaces where much of the chatter is filler or bots, and highest common denominator forums, narrower communities organized around specific, high-intent interests. His argument was that the second kind is where attention will concentrate as the open web fills with slop.

A no-hire, no-fire labor market

The main topic came out of a table-topics session at the Master B2B summit in Chicago: who is your next hire? The backdrop is a labor market that has been unusually still. Andy pointed to a low-hire, low-fire pattern that has held for more than a year. He cautioned that some of the numbers circulating online come from unreliable sources, and singled out a widely shared hiring-suppression statistic as one to treat with skepticism.

The more grounded data points are consistent with that picture. The layoff rate has sat near a historic floor of about 1.1%, and voluntary quits fell to roughly 1.8%, a low not seen outside the pandemic since 2014, according to Indeed’s Hiring Lab and the Bureau of Labor Statistics. PwC’s most recent Global CEO Survey shows executives holding workforce plans steady amid uncertainty. Andy’s summary was that in times of technological change and uncertainty, companies freeze, even as the quantity of work stays flat or grows.

The next hire may not be a full-time employee

With requisitions hard to get approved and the work still piling up, the hosts described teams rethinking what a hire even is. Andy’s reframing was the practical heart of the episode.

Stop thinking, I have a need, so I am going to hire a person. Start with, I have a need, how should I solve that problem? It may be a human, it might be a contractor, it might be software.

Andy Hoar, Master B2B

That opens up options that were less viable a year or two ago. Vetted fractional experts can deliver a specific outcome on a predictable basis. Contractors fill defined gaps. And AI agents are starting to take on routine tasks directly. Andy shared a story about a company that ran a test of sorts between a human in a competitive-intelligence role and Claude doing the same work. The AI surfaced insights the team had not been aware of and reported in real time. The person eventually left, and the role was not refilled. He avoided generalizing from a single case, though he noted there are enough of these stories to make companies reconsider the default of hiring a person for every need.

Where teams are spending: marketing, customer insight, data, and AI

When the summit tables worked through the question, the gaps that surfaced repeatedly were marketing, customer insight, data, and AI. Brian and Andy noted the irony that these are exactly the areas AI tools can increasingly support. The driver is the change in how buyers research and engage, with answer engines reshaping the journey. As Andy put it, a lot of B2B companies are asking whether they have the right people to figure this out.

Hiring for leadership leverage

If routine tasks are increasingly handled by agents and contractors, the hosts argued, the person you bring on should be someone who can manage all of it: staff, processes, and now bots. Andy described this as hiring for leadership leverage, and noted that a track record of delivering results by orchestrating work is something many recent graduates do not yet have, which may partly explain why entry-level roles are harder to land right now.

The rise of the non-programmer builder

Andy closed the topic with a pattern he has seen firsthand: people without technical backgrounds building working software through vibe coding. He described one person who built an after-hours customer service capability that turned into a lead-generation revenue source, and another who has been replacing frustrating internal systems with custom solutions. Neither is a developer by training. Brian tied this back to a broader shift toward a gig and fractional model, where an individual backed by a set of agents can produce results that used to require a team.

What this means for B2B ecommerce teams

The takeaway for practitioners is that the hiring decision now starts further upstream. Before posting a role, the question is how best to meet the need, with a full-time employee, a fractional expert, a contractor, or software each a legitimate answer. Marketing, customer insight, and data remain the priority areas, the buying journey is moving toward answer engines, and the people worth hiring are increasingly those who can manage a mix of humans and machines toward an outcome.

Frequently asked questions

Why does it matter that bots now make up the majority of web traffic?

Cloudflare reported in mid-2026 that automated bots and AI agents generate about 57.4% of web requests, surpassing human-generated traffic for the first time. The figure measures page requests rather than human attention, so people still dominate by time spent online. For businesses, the significance is that AI agents and answer engines increasingly sit between buyers and content, which raises the importance of publishing clear, structured, machine-readable information that answer engines can find and cite.

Should a company's next hire be a full-time employee, a fractional expert, or an AI agent?

There is no single right answer. A more useful starting point is to define the outcome you need, then choose the best way to deliver it. A full-time employee suits ongoing, core responsibilities. A vetted fractional expert or contractor can deliver a specific result on a predictable basis without adding permanent headcount. AI agents can take on routine, repeatable tasks. Many teams now combine these rather than defaulting to a full-time hire for every gap.

What is a fractional expert, and when does hiring one make sense?

A fractional expert is an experienced specialist who works part-time or on a project basis across one or more companies, rather than as a full-time employee. Hiring one tends to make sense when a team needs senior expertise for a defined scope, cannot get a full-time requisition approved, or wants a predictable outcome without a long-term headcount commitment. Vetting matters, because quality among self-described fractional providers varies widely.

Why are marketing, customer insight, and data the most common hiring priorities right now?

Buyers are changing how they research and make decisions, with answer engines and AI tools playing a larger role in the journey. That puts pressure on marketing, customer understanding, and data capabilities, since these determine whether a company is visible and persuasive in the channels buyers now use. Many teams are unsure they have the right people to navigate this shift, which is why these areas come up repeatedly when companies plan their next hire.

What does hiring for leadership leverage mean?

Hiring for leadership leverage means prioritizing people who can manage work and orchestrate resources, including staff, processes, contractors, and AI agents, rather than people who only execute individual tasks. As routine work shifts to automation and contractors, the most valuable hires are often those with a track record of coordinating multiple inputs to deliver results.

What is a non-programmer builder?

A non-programmer builder is someone without a formal software development background who creates working applications using AI-assisted coding, sometimes called vibe coding. Examples include building an after-hours customer service tool or replacing a frustrating internal process with custom software. The pattern matters because it lets small teams and individuals solve problems and create capabilities that previously required dedicated engineering resources.

Sources & methodology

  1. Cloudflare, bot versus human web traffic data, June 2026
  2. PwC 29th Annual Global CEO Survey, January 2026
  3. Indeed Hiring Lab and U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, JOLTS data
  4. Friday 15 Podcast, Master B2B
Andy Hoar Andy Hoar
Co-Founder, Master B2B

Andy is a Co-Founder of Master B2B, founder of Paradigm B2B and author of the book Bot2Bot: The New Future of B2B Commerce. Andy is one of the leading global authorities on B2B commerce strategy.

Brian Beck Brian Beck
Co-Founder, Master B2B

Brian is a co-founder of Master B2B, Managing Partner of Amazon agency Enceiba, and author of the book "Billion Dollar B2B Ecommerce." Brian has also been C-level digital commerce executive with two decades of experience.

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