What if your next unicorn is not on the staff?

For decades, talent in companies has been measured by the number of contracts on the payroll: recruit, retain and lock in. But technological acceleration and labour market stress are rewriting that rule.
Today, the ability to activate specialised skills at the right time can make the difference between failure and becoming a high-growth company.
On that horizon, the question is no longer “who do I hire” but “how do I access the talent that makes me scale”.
The payroll myth: it’s all about impact that counts
The shortage of technological profiles in Spain is a reality that conditions the strategy of many companies. Industry reports estimate that there are more than 120,000 unfilled technological vacancies in the country, a figure that shows the mismatch between the training offer and business demand.
This gap forces us to rethink the traditional logic: waiting to close a permanent contract with the perfect candidate is not always compatible with the urgency of the market.
According to the
Asociación DigitalES
and the
Banco de España
, structural challenges in training, mobility and skills alignment make quick, internal solutions difficult.
This reality reinforces a key point: companies need alternative strategies to access critical talent, without relying exclusively on permanent recruitment.
Time & Materials: the flexibility that drives start-ups
In the face of this reality, more flexible collaboration models have gone from being marginal options to levers for growth. The model
Time & Materials
, for example, allows companies to augment their team with specialists who are temporarily integrated into the client’s structure to respond to work peaks or specific product phases. It is not a matter of “outsourcing” a problem, but rather of adding capabilities under agile methodologies and shared objectives.
For those who need to quickly activate cloud profiles, artificial intelligence specialists or senior developers, this elasticity reduces time-to-market without compromising the cash flow. At Pasiona we offer
collaboration models
that seek precisely this combination: immediate experience and operational fit with internal teams.
Scaling up without compromising the cash flow
The alternative of scaling up with in-house staff has fixed costs that can be prohibitive in early stages or in volatile economic cycles. Hiring indiscriminately to cover a growth projection that may take time to materialise is a real financial risk. By contrast, working with specialists on demand allows for real scalability: growing when the market demands it and reducing exposure when activity moderates.
Moreover, this approach facilitates rapid testing: a startup can launch a new feature, validate hypotheses with real users and, if the metrics work, convert temp-to-hire; if not, learn without having taken on debt for permanent talent. This ability to experiment in a controlled way explains the speed with which many technology companies reach critical mass.
Hybrid talent: attractive also for professionals
It is not only companies that stand to gain. The technology job market is evolving towards “portfolio” career paths in which the variety of projects and exposure to different challenges are as important as stability.
For many senior developers, cloud architects or data specialists, working on a project basis in demanding environments – and with blue-chip clients – is a value proposition: increased learning, international visibility and the chance to build a career rich in experience.
This preference explains why models such as staff augmentation are not just about moving resources: they attract talent looking for challenges and professional growth without sacrificing flexibility. Collaboration with technology partners offers a way to participate in strategic projects – often international – without losing the professional mobility demanded by the new generation of professionals.
You don’t hunt unicorns, you build them.
The “unicorn” imaginary is often associated with glittering successes, but behind these stories are tactical decisions about how a team is put together. Today’s successful scale-ups
In the end, what matters is not whether talent is on a payroll, but how much impact it is capable of generating from day one. In a market where technology vacancies are numerous and responsiveness drives competitiveness, thinking about hybrid talent models is no longer a concession but a strategy.
Find out how our
collaboration models
help you access specialised talent and scale without compromising the structure of your company.
business strategy, increase in staff, labour flexibility, models of collaboration, Technological talent, Time & Materials
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