A bonus in the handbook. A form on the intranet. A spreadsheet one person keeps current. Plenty of agencies run referrals this way. This page is an honest look at where that setup holds up, where it breaks, and who it breaks on.
If you're one office with a handful of recruiters and a few referrals a month, you don't need software. Everyone knows who referred whom because everyone was in the room when it happened. The bonus gets paid because the owner signs the checks and remembers the intro.
That program works. Honestly, if the three conditions on the right all hold, keep the spreadsheet and bookmark this page for the day one of them stops being true.
The manual setup earns its keep when
Manual programs don't fail loudly. They fail one referral at a time, and each miss teaches someone not to refer again.
A referral arrives as a text to a recruiter. The candidate applies three days later through your website, and the record stamps the source as "website." Two months on, nobody can reconstruct who made the intro. Two people claim it. The spreadsheet says nothing either way.
Most bonus rules depend on hours worked, and nobody's cross-checking payroll against a spreadsheet every week. So the ambassador, the person in your network who made the referral, asks where the bonus is. The answer takes three weeks. A thank-you turns into a collections call.
Refer a friend, hear nothing for a month, and you won't do it twice. We wrote up how this plays out in How Manual Referral Programs Can Kill Candidate Relationships. The cost that never shows up in a report is the referrals you never got because the last one went nowhere.
The tracker sits in a personal drive. When its owner changes jobs, the program resets to zero: no history, no ambassador list, no proof anything worked. Recruiters notice. They stop asking for referrals because they can't point to the last one that paid off.
| The work | Spreadsheet + email | Staffing Referrals |
|---|---|---|
| Capture | Whoever remembers to write it down | Every referral logged with its source and owner |
| Attribution | Reconstructed from memory at bonus time | Tracked in your ATS from first touch to placement |
| Hours toward the bonus | Someone cross-checks payroll by hand | Accrue automatically against your bonus rules |
| Payouts | Disputed, delayed, easy to miss | Eligibility flips the moment the threshold hits |
| What the ambassador sees | Silence until the check arrives | Live status on every referral they've made |
| What the CFO sees at renewal | A spreadsheet with gaps | A placement-by-placement record |
| When the owner leaves | The program resets to zero | Nothing changes |