Governance and Risk in Hiring: What Vietnam Companies Must Tighten in 2026

Governance and Risk in Hiring: What Vietnam Companies Must Tighten in 2026
By Valerie Ong, Regional Marketing Manager
Published by Reeracoen Vietnam, a leading recruitment agency in APAC.
Language
This article is written in English for readers in Vietnam. Vietnamese translations are available on our website.
Hiring Risk Is Becoming More Visible in Vietnam
Vietnam’s labour market remains active in 2026, with unemployment stabilising at around 2 to 2.5 percent according to the General Statistics Office. Hiring momentum continues across finance, manufacturing, digital, and foreign-invested sectors.
However, as competition intensifies, hiring risk is becoming more visible.
In recent years, many companies focused primarily on speed: filling roles quickly to support growth. In 2026, governance expectations are rising. Companies are now being evaluated not only on whom they hire, but how they hire.
Poorly structured hiring decisions can result in:
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Compliance breaches
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Conflict-of-interest exposure
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Reputational damage
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Increased turnover costs
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Leadership instability
Hiring is no longer purely an operational function. It is a governance issue.
Why Governance in Hiring Matters More Now
Three structural shifts are increasing scrutiny around hiring practices in Vietnam.
1. Greater Workforce Transparency
Vietnam’s workforce is increasingly digital and informed. Employees research company policies, share workplace experiences online, and discuss internal practices openly.
Inconsistent hiring standards or perceived unfairness can quickly influence employer reputation.
2. Rising Regulatory and Compliance Expectations
Multinational and Japanese firms operating in Vietnam are aligning local hiring processes with regional governance frameworks. These frameworks require:
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Documented evaluation criteria
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Conflict-of-interest disclosures
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Standardised interview processes
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Structured background verification
Companies that lack structured documentation face both compliance and reputational exposure.
3. Increased Mid-Level Accountability
As discussed in earlier articles in this series, mid-level leadership carries operational responsibility.
Poor hiring at this layer increases execution risk. One weak management hire can disrupt team morale, compliance discipline, and performance consistency.
Governance maturity reduces these risks before they materialise.
3 Common Hiring Risks in Vietnam in 2026
1. Over-Reliance on Informal Networks
While referrals and personal networks remain culturally relevant in Vietnam, over-reliance on informal hiring channels can create:
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Perceived favouritism
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Skills mismatch
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Reduced diversity of perspective
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Internal morale concerns
Structured evaluation ensures referrals meet objective criteria.
2. Inconsistent Interview Standards
When hiring managers apply different standards across candidates, risk increases.
Without structured competency frameworks:
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Decisions become subjective
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Bias becomes harder to detect
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Documentation becomes incomplete
In the event of internal disputes, lack of structured documentation weakens organisational defensibility.
3. Inadequate Background and Reference Checks
As competition increases, some companies reduce screening depth to accelerate hiring.
However, insufficient verification may result in:
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Misrepresented experience
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Undisclosed conflicts
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Governance exposure in regulated industries
Structured verification protects both employer and stakeholder confidence.
The Hidden Cost of Poor Hiring Governance
Poor hiring decisions create compounding costs.
Direct costs include:
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Recruitment fees
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Onboarding expenses
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Lost productivity
Indirect costs are often higher:
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Team morale decline
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Client confidence erosion
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Leadership distraction
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Increased resignation ripple effects
Global workforce studies indicate that replacing a mid-level employee can cost between 50 and 150 percent of annual salary when productivity loss and transition costs are considered.
In Vietnam’s competitive mid-level market, prevention is significantly less costly than correction.
Practical Governance Tightening for 2026
Companies seeking to reduce hiring risk should focus on three structured improvements.
1. Formalise Competency Frameworks
Define clear competency expectations for each management level.
Frameworks should include:
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Technical capability
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Decision accountability
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Communication maturity
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Governance awareness
Structured frameworks improve evaluation consistency.
2. Standardise Interview Panels
Rather than single-interviewer decisions, structured panel interviews:
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Reduce bias
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Increase perspective diversity
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Improve documentation quality
Clear scoring templates support defensible decisions.
3. Audit Hiring Outcomes Quarterly
Review hiring outcomes to assess:
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Early resignation rates
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Performance consistency
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Departmental turnover patterns
If specific departments show repeated instability, hiring governance may require adjustment.
Data-led review strengthens accountability.
The Role of Recruitment Partners in Risk Reduction
External recruitment partners can strengthen governance maturity when they:
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Conduct structured screening
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Verify employment history
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Assess behavioural fit
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Benchmark compensation alignment
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Provide market intelligence
In complex sectors such as finance, compliance, manufacturing, and bilingual leadership roles, structured external evaluation adds an additional layer of discipline.
Hiring is strongest when internal governance and external advisory align.
What This Means for Employers in Vietnam
In 2026, hiring risk management is not optional. It is a competitive differentiator.
Companies that:
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Document evaluation criteria
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Standardise decision processes
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Strengthen verification protocols
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Audit hiring patterns
build organisational resilience.
Speed remains important. Governance ensures sustainability.
Strong hiring governance protects employer reputation, leadership stability, and long-term performance.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why is hiring governance important in Vietnam?
Increasing transparency and regulatory expectations mean hiring decisions are more visible and scrutinised.
Does structured hiring slow down recruitment?
Initially it may add process steps, but it reduces costly mis-hires and long-term instability.
What industries face higher hiring risk?
Finance, compliance, manufacturing leadership, and regulated sectors carry higher governance exposure.
Can smaller companies implement structured hiring?
Yes. Even simple competency frameworks and interview scorecards improve governance maturity.
For Employers
Looking to strengthen hiring governance and reduce workforce risk in Vietnam?
Reeracoen Vietnam supports structured screening, market benchmarking, and advisory consultation to improve hiring discipline and stability.
For Professionals
Interested in joining organisations with structured governance and leadership stability?
Connect with Reeracoen Vietnam for confidential insights into reputable employers and long-term career opportunities.
Related Articles
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Why Employer Reputation Is Now a Hiring Advantage
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Retaining High Performers Without Overpaying
References
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General Statistics Office of Vietnam, Labour Force Report 2025
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Regional Governance and Workforce Risk Studies 2025

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