Campus Recruiting: 6 Strategies for Hiring New Graduates (2026)
6 campus recruiting strategies backed by NACE data: 62% intern offer rate, 51% conversion rate. Build targeted university pipelines that actually produce hires.
6 campus recruiting strategies backed by NACE data: 62% intern offer rate, 51% conversion rate. Build targeted university pipelines that actually produce hires.
17 min read
Steven Lu
The best campus recruiting strategies focus on building long-term university pipelines, converting interns into full-time hires, and using skills-based evaluation instead of GPA cutoffs. That's the short answer. The longer answer involves understanding why so many companies still get campus hiring wrong - and what the data says about fixing it.
According to NACE's Job Outlook 2025 Spring Update, 86.9% of employers are actively recruiting for both full-time and internship positions. That's up from 84.7% the year before. Campus recruiting isn't shrinking - it's getting more competitive. And the companies winning aren't the ones with the biggest career fair booths. They're the ones with repeatable, data-driven processes.
The cost side is steep too: the average campus cost-per-hire is roughly $6,275 according to NACE's 2025 Recruiting Benchmarks, compared to $4,700 across all hires (SHRM, 2025). AI sourcing tools like Pin - which gives recruiters access to 850M+ candidate profiles including recent graduates - can help reduce that cost by automating the search and outreach that traditionally eats up campus recruiting budgets. These six strategies show you how to get a better return on that investment.
TL;DR: Campus recruiting works when you treat it as a pipeline, not an event. Focus on fewer schools with deeper partnerships, convert interns at the 51% benchmark or higher, adopt skills-based evaluation (70% of employers already have), and automate outreach across channels to hit the 8 touchpoints students need before applying.
The average number of target schools dropped from 39 in 2020 to just 25 in 2024, according to Veris Insights' 2025 campus recruiting research. That's a 36% reduction. And 63% of university recruiting teams now use a tiered approach to school selection rather than a flat list.
Why the shift? Depth beats breadth. A recruiter who shows up at 40 career fairs shakes a lot of hands but rarely builds the relationships that turn into reliable pipelines. A recruiter who builds standing partnerships with 15-20 schools - guest lectures, capstone project sponsorships, ambassador programs - creates a steady flow of qualified candidates year after year.
There's also a practical math problem with long school lists. Median campus recruiting budgets sit at roughly $114,000 per year, according to NACE's 2025 Recruiting Benchmarks. Spread that across 40 schools and you get $2,850 per school - barely enough to cover career fair registration and a recruiter's travel. Concentrate it across 20 schools and you have $5,700 per school to invest in real partnerships.
A tiered model divides schools into three categories based on return:
The answer isn't prestige. It's historical yield. Look at your last 2-3 years of campus hires and answer these questions: Which schools produced the most hires? Which produced hires that stayed past 12 months? Which had the highest offer acceptance rates? Those are your Tier 1 candidates.
Some teams default to targeting the most prestigious schools in their region. That's a mistake. A mid-tier state university with a strong co-op program might produce better candidates for your specific roles than an Ivy League school where your company is one of 200 employers competing for attention. Let the data guide the decision, not brand recognition.
The tiered approach isn't just about saving money. It's about building recognition. According to Handshake's 2025 Campus to Career Report, students are 2.2x more likely to click on an employer's messages after seeing that employer's content in their feed. Repeated visibility matters. You can't build it at a school you visit once a year.
Don't limit your Tier 1 list to brand-name universities, either. HBCUs, regional state schools, and community colleges with strong technical programs often produce graduates with practical skills and lower competition from other employers. That's a major advantage for companies building diversity recruiting programs.
The most effective campus recruiters don't just attend career fairs. They embed themselves into the academic ecosystem. Sponsor a capstone project. Guest-lecture in a class related to your industry. Offer to serve on an advisory board. These activities do three things: they give you early access to strong students, they build faculty trust (and faculty refer their best students), and they make your brand familiar before recruiting season even starts.
Career services offices are gatekeepers. They decide which employers get prime career fair booth placement, early access to student databases, and promotional emails. Investing in that relationship - showing up for mock interview panels, offering resume workshops, sharing post-hire outcomes - pays dividends for years.
Employers extended full-time offers to 62% of their 2024 intern class - the lowest offer rate in five years, according to NACE's 2025 Internship and Co-op Report. The overall intern-to-hire conversion rate fell to just under 51%. That means nearly half of all internships end without a hire.
Those numbers should concern any recruiting team investing in an internship program. If your conversion rate sits below 50%, you're spending money on training, mentorship, and onboarding without capturing the return.
Here's a striking detail from the same NACE report: in-person interns received offers at a 72% rate, compared to 56.2% for hybrid interns - a 16-point gap. That doesn't necessarily mean remote internships are worse. But it does suggest that in-person exposure builds stronger evaluator confidence and deeper team connections.
Treat the internship as a 10-12 week working interview, not a summer project assignment. That means giving interns real work that mirrors what full-time employees do. The intern who spends 10 weeks filing documents won't accept a return offer. The intern who ships a feature, presents to stakeholders, and gets honest feedback will.
Here's a conversion-focused internship structure that works:
More than 70% of organizations plan to increase or maintain intern hiring levels despite an overall dip, per NACE's 2025 data. If your competitors are expanding their internship programs, standing still means falling behind.
Here's a tactical detail that many campus recruiting teams miss: the acceptance rate for intern return offers actually rose even as the offer rate fell (NACE, 2025). That means students who receive early offers are more likely to say yes. They want certainty. And the first employer to extend a full-time offer often wins, regardless of whether a "better" offer comes later. Speed matters.
In-person career fairs are back and bigger than before. According to NACE's career services data, 93.9% of institutions held career fairs in person for the 2024-25 academic year. Only 33.2% held virtual fairs. Median in-person attendance climbed to 700 students in 2023-24, up from 419 in 2021-22. Virtual fair attendance fell to just 93, down from 295.
The data clearly favors in-person events, but dismissing virtual entirely would be a mistake. Handshake's 2025 Campus to Career Report found that 69% of students say it's easier to make connections at in-person events, while 62% find virtual events more convenient. Those aren't contradictory findings - they reflect different student needs at different stages of the funnel.
Use in-person events for relationship-building and top-of-funnel awareness. Use virtual sessions for follow-up, deeper conversations, and candidates at schools outside your Tier 1 list. Here's what the data supports:
Don't just show up - follow up. 75% of students say they're more likely to apply to future jobs after meeting an employer at a career event (Handshake, 2025). That only works if you stay in touch after the handshake.
Most companies waste their career fair investment. They send a recruiter, set up a banner, hand out swag, and collect a stack of resumes that sits in a folder for weeks. Here's how to do it differently:
Which brings us to outreach.
Only 6% of Gen Z say their primary career goal is to reach a leadership position, according to Deloitte's 2025 Gen Z and Millennial Survey of 23,000+ respondents across 44 countries. That's a fundamental shift. This generation isn't chasing titles. They're looking for purpose, growth, and stability.
The same Deloitte survey found that 89% of Gen Z consider a sense of purpose important to job satisfaction. And learning and development ranks as a top-3 reason for choosing an employer. If your campus recruiting pitch leads with "fast-track to management," you're speaking a language most new graduates don't respond to.
Reframe your employer value proposition around three things:
Your overall employer branding strategy provides the foundation, but campus recruiting needs its own layer. What works for experienced hires doesn't automatically resonate with a 21-year-old who has never held a full-time job.
Practical steps that move the needle:
For more on recruitment marketing tactics that fill your pipeline, start with how you show up digitally before you ever set foot on campus.
Pin's multi-channel outreach hits a 48% response rate - explore Pin's automated outreach.
70% of employers now use skills-based hiring for entry-level campus hires, up from 65% the prior year, according to NACE's Job Outlook 2026 report. Meanwhile, GPA screening has collapsed - from 73% of employers in 2019 to just 42% today. The shift is real and accelerating.
This makes sense when you think about it. A 3.8 GPA in marketing doesn't tell you whether a candidate can actually write compelling copy, analyze campaign data, or manage a vendor relationship. And plenty of computer science majors with middling grades have built impressive side projects that demonstrate exactly the skills a hiring team needs.
New graduates don't have years of work experience to evaluate. So you need alternative signals. Here's a practical framework:
Here's something most campus recruiting guides won't tell you: the biggest advantage of skills-based hiring isn't better candidates. It's a wider funnel. When you drop GPA minimums and major requirements, you suddenly have access to candidates from community colleges, coding bootcamps, non-traditional backgrounds, and schools outside the usual recruiting circuits. That's how you find people your competitors miss.
Consider this: 74% of Gen Z believe AI will impact their work within one year (Deloitte, 2025). Many students are already upskilling in areas their coursework doesn't cover - teaching themselves Python, building AI projects, completing online certifications. A GPA requirement would screen these self-taught candidates out. A skills assessment would let them shine.
Skills-based evaluation works at the interview stage, but it needs a skills-based sourcing strategy upstream. You can't evaluate a candidate's portfolio if you never found them in the first place. This is where AI-powered candidate search becomes valuable for campus recruiting teams.
Instead of filtering by school name and GPA, AI sourcing tools let you search by skills, projects, certifications, and experience type. A recruiter looking for entry-level data analysts can search for candidates who know SQL, have worked with Tableau, and completed a data-related capstone project - regardless of which school they attended or what their major was. That's a fundamentally different search than "3.5 GPA, statistics major, top-25 school."
It takes an average of 8 touchpoints with a student before they apply, according to Handshake's 2025 Campus to Career Report. Eight. That's not a single career fair conversation and a follow-up email. That's sustained engagement across multiple channels over weeks or months.
No recruiting team can manually run 8-touch sequences for hundreds of student candidates across 15-25 target schools. The math doesn't work. This is where automation becomes essential - not as a replacement for personal connection, but as the scaffolding that makes personal connection possible at scale.
Effective campus outreach sequences combine three channels:
The sequence matters as much as the channel mix. A realistic campus outreach cadence might look like: career fair conversation (day 0), personalized follow-up email (day 1), LinkedIn connection (day 3), value-add content email about the role or team (day 7), text reminder about application deadline (day 10), second email with recent hire testimonial (day 14), phone screen invitation (day 18).
Pin automates this kind of multi-channel sequence across email, LinkedIn, and SMS. With access to 850M+ candidate profiles - including recent graduates - recruiters can identify and engage new grad talent without manually searching school by school. As Rich Rosen, Executive Recruiter at Cornerstone Search, put it: "Absolutely money maker for recruiters... in 6 months I can directly attribute over $250K in revenue to Pin."
That kind of automation matters even more for campus recruiting, where the candidate pool refreshes every single semester and you're starting from scratch with each new graduating class.
The biggest risk with automated outreach is sounding like automated outreach. Students can spot a mass email instantly. The key is personalization at scale - using merge fields and dynamic content to make every message feel individual even when the underlying sequence is the same.
Effective personalization for campus outreach includes:
The difference between a 10% reply rate and a 40% reply rate isn't the number of messages you send. It's whether each message feels like it was written for the recipient. Automated sequences handle the timing and cadence. Personalization handles the connection.
NACE's 2025 data puts the national intern conversion rate at 51% and cost-per-hire at $6,275 - but most teams don't track either number. They measure applicant volume and hires, which is table stakes. The metrics that actually drive improvement are more specific:
Track these by school, by recruiter, and by program (internship vs. direct hire). The patterns will tell you where to invest more and where to pull back.
Most campus recruiting teams don't track these metrics because they don't have baselines. This table consolidates the national benchmarks from NACE, SHRM, and Handshake into a reference you can use immediately:
| Metric | National Average | Target | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Intern conversion rate | 51% | 60%+ | NACE, 2025 |
| Cost-per-hire (campus) | $6,275 | Below $5,000 | NACE, 2025 |
| Career fair interview rate | 45%+ | 50%+ | NACE, 2025 |
| Touchpoints before application | 8 | 6-8 | Handshake, 2025 |
| Outreach response rate | 15-25% | 35%+ | Industry benchmark |
Review these numbers quarterly, not annually. Campus recruiting cycles are short, and the data goes stale fast.
With average campus cost-per-hire at $6,275 (NACE, 2025), mistakes are expensive. Even experienced recruiting teams make these errors, and each one can waste a full cycle's worth of budget and effort.
Start 6-9 months before graduation. For spring graduates, begin outreach in September. NACE data shows that 86.9% of employers recruit for both full-time and internship roles in the fall semester. Early movers get first access to top candidates before the spring hiring surge.
The average cost-per-hire for campus recruiting is approximately $6,275, according to NACE's 2025 Recruiting Benchmarks. That's 33% higher than the $4,700 overall average across all hires (SHRM, 2025). Tiering your school list and automating outreach can reduce this significantly.
The national benchmark is just under 51%, per NACE's 2025 Internship and Co-op Report. In-person interns convert at higher rates (72% offer rate) compared to hybrid interns (56.2%). Companies with structured evaluation and mentorship programs consistently exceed these averages.
The data supports it. GPA screening dropped from 73% of employers in 2019 to 42% in 2026, while 70% of employers now use skills-based hiring for entry-level roles (NACE, 2026). Skills assessments, project portfolios, and structured interviews predict job performance more reliably than grade point averages.
An average of 8 touchpoints before a student applies, according to Handshake's 2025 Campus to Career Report. Effective campus outreach uses a mix of email, LinkedIn, and SMS spread across 2-3 weeks. Students who see employer content first are 2.2x more likely to engage with follow-up messages.
Campus recruiting gets harder every year. More employers competing for fewer new graduates at fewer schools, all while candidates expect faster responses and more transparency. The teams that win aren't working harder at career fairs. They're building systems: partnerships that deepen over time, internship programs that convert reliably, and outreach sequences that run automatically.
Find new graduate talent faster with Pin's AI sourcing →