How Long Should It Take to Fill a Commerce Role in 2026?
Real hiring timelines by practice area, and the specific things that stretch a five-week search into a twelve-week one.
Real hiring timelines by practice area, and the specific things that stretch a five-week search into a twelve-week one.
"How long will this take?" is the first question almost every hiring manager asks once a requisition is approved, and it is also the question generic staffing benchmarks answer worst. A blended average across every open role in the country tells you almost nothing about how long it will take to fill a Category Manager who has actually managed a Target or Kroger relationship, or a Site Operations Manager who has actually run a platform migration. Time to fill varies more by practice area and seniority than most hiring managers expect, and knowing the realistic range up front is what keeps a search from feeling like it has gone off track when it hasn't.
Time to fill is typically counted from the day a search formally kicks off, meaning the job description is finalized and sourcing begins, to the day a candidate signs an offer. It does not include the weeks a role often sits open internally before a search is approved, and it does not include onboarding or notice period, both of which can add another two to six weeks before the person actually starts. Hiring managers comparing their own experience to a published benchmark should make sure they are measuring the same window, since a role that "took three months to fill" often really took six or seven weeks once the pre-approval delay is subtracted out.
These ranges reflect typical Manager and Director-level searches. VP and Head-of-level roles in any of these areas generally run several weeks longer than the high end shown here.
| Practice Area | Typical Time to Fill | What Commonly Extends It |
|---|---|---|
| Category Management | 6–10 weeks | Retailer-specific data and category planning experience is a smaller pool than the title suggests |
| Marketplace Management | 6–11 weeks | 1P/3P and retail media platform experience narrows candidates fast once you go beyond Amazon fluency |
| Supply Chain & Operations | 5–9 weeks | A specific WMS, ERP, or 3PL background is often non-negotiable, which shrinks the pool regionally |
| Retail & Digital Technology (Site Ops) | 5–8 weeks | Overlap with IT means competing internally for the same candidates as engineering roles |
| Brand & Category Management | 5–9 weeks | Companies frequently want both trade marketing and analytical skill in one hire, which is a rarer combination |
| DTC Site Management & Marketing | 4–7 weeks | Generally the widest candidate pool of the group, though platform-specific (Shopify Plus, etc.) needs can add time |
Two searches for the same title, at the same level, in the same city, can land four weeks apart in how long they take. The gap almost never comes down to luck. It usually comes down to a short list of controllable variables.
Every additional round adds roughly a week once scheduling logistics are factored in, and candidates who are further along in a competing process are the most likely to drop out while waiting on round five or six. Three to four rounds is typically enough to make a confident decision on a Manager or Director hire.
A role posted or discussed with a compensation range that is not competitive for the market gets filtered out by strong candidates before a recruiter ever gets a decline reason. Confirming the band against current market data before a search kicks off, rather than after four weeks of underwhelming submissions, is one of the most reliable ways to avoid a slow start.
Searches run through a single recruiting partner with real accountability for the timeline generally move faster than searches split across multiple firms competing to submit the same candidates first, which paradoxically tends to slow decision-making down rather than speed it up.
A requirement like "must have managed a Walmart Connect budget" or "must have run a WMS cutover" is reasonable, but stacking three or four such requirements onto one req is a common way an otherwise normal search quietly turns into an outlier.
Most of the levers a hiring manager actually controls have nothing to do with candidate supply and everything to do with internal process:
Most Manager-level commerce roles fill in roughly four to seven weeks from kickoff to signed offer. Director-level searches typically run six to ten weeks, and VP or Head-of-level searches often run ten to sixteen weeks given the smaller candidate pool and longer reference and negotiation cycle. These are ranges, not guarantees, and the practice area matters as much as the title.
Marketplace Management and Category Management roles tend to run longer than average because the pool of candidates with real retailer-specific or platform-specific experience is smaller than the job title suggests. Supply Chain and Site Operations roles can also stretch when the requirement combines a technical skill set with a specific ERP, WMS, or platform background.
Generally yes, because a recruiter who already has an active network in a specific practice area, such as retail media or supply chain, skips the weeks a generalist search spends learning the difference between a 1P and 3P Amazon listing or what a WMS migration actually requires. The time saved usually shows up in fewer unqualified submissions rather than a faster first interview.
Adding interview rounds after the search has already started. A four-round process that becomes a six-round process midway through, because a new stakeholder wants to weigh in, is the most common self-inflicted delay we see, and it disproportionately costs companies their top candidates, who are the ones most likely to have other offers in motion.