Australian employers are not only dealing with skills shortages. They are dealing with the operational pressure those shortages create.
When key roles stay vacant, the impact is quickly felt across the business. Output slows, existing teams carry more pressure, customer delivery becomes harder to maintain and growth plans are delayed.
In sectors where experienced people are already difficult to secure, recruitment can no longer be treated as a simple vacancy-filling exercise. It has become a key part of how businesses protect productivity and plan for growth.
It is within this environment that MASA’s expansion into Perth through Wood Recruitment becomes relevant, offering employers access to a broader recruitment model at a time when local hiring conditions remain under pressure.
Skills shortages are changing the way employers hire
Australia’s labour market remains tight, with shortages continuing across many of the roles businesses rely on to keep operating and growing.
According to Jobs and Skills Australia’s latest Occupation Shortage List, shortages remain across a wide range of technical, trade, operational and professional occupations. The April 2026 Recruitment Experiences and Outlook Survey also showed recruitment difficulty sitting at 45%, with almost half of Australian employers still actively recruiting.
For businesses, the challenge is no longer just attracting applicants. It is finding people with the right skills, experience and reliability, quickly enough to protect productivity and support growth.
The pressure is already being felt in day-to-day operations. Vacancies are staying open for longer, recruitment costs are rising, scaling plans are being delayed and competition for experienced workers remains high.
That is changing how employers think about recruitment.
Rather than waiting for a vacancy to appear and then trying to fill it under pressure, many organisations are starting to treat recruitment as part of broader workforce planning.
That shift is placing greater value on recruitment partners that can offer more than just candidate supply.
Local Perth knowledge backed by broader recruitment reach
In a tighter labour market, employers need more than speed. They need recruitment partners who understand where skills gaps are emerging, how those gaps affect operations, and how to build candidate pipelines before vacancies become business risks.
This is why MASA’s expansion into Perth through Wood Recruitment becomes particularly relevant.
Established in 1991, Wood Recruitment has spent more than three decades supporting Western Australian employers with permanent, temporary and contract recruitment. Its value has been built on local market knowledge, understanding Perth’s employment conditions, candidate expectations and the commercial pressures facing businesses across the state.
Through MASA, that local experience is now backed by wider recruitment infrastructure, established sourcing systems and access to international candidate networks.
MASA has also been approved as a Standard Business Sponsor by the Australian Government Department of Home Affairs, allowing it to sponsor suitably skilled overseas workers under eligible visa pathways.
For employers struggling to find suitable candidates locally, this creates another route to talent. It does not replace Australian hiring, but it gives businesses another option when local recruitment alone cannot meet operational demand.
South African networks add depth to MASA’s Australian strategy
Where MASA adds further weight is in the depth of its South African recruitment base.
After four decades in the South African workforce sector, MASA has built established candidate networks across industries that closely align with many of Australia’s shortage areas, including logistics, manufacturing, hospitality, technical services and general operations.
For Australian employers, the benefit is practical. International recruitment can often be slow, unfamiliar and difficult to navigate. MASA’s existing candidate relationships and screening experience give the group a stronger starting point when identifying workers who may be suitable for eligible Australian roles.
That can be particularly valuable where a vacancy is no longer just an HR issue, but a direct constraint on output, service delivery or expansion.
The Perth move is also being used as a launchpad for broader Australian growth.
Leading that push is Daniel Stainforth, Principal of Wood Recruitment and MASA Australia. Originally from South Africa and part of a third-generation recruitment family, Daniel brings experience across permanent, contract and large-scale temporary staffing, with exposure to FMCG, hospitality, manufacturing and logistics.
Now based in Wood Recruitment’s Perth office, he is helping shape the group’s next phase, with Brisbane identified as the next market.
Building a broader recruitment model for a tighter market
Businesses that want to keep growing will need recruitment models that give them more than access to applicants. They will need stronger workforce planning, deeper local market knowledge and access to wider talent pools when local supply cannot meet demand.
That is the space MASA and Wood Recruitment are moving into. The group is combining Wood Recruitment’s established Perth presence with MASA’s international reach, recruitment infrastructure and sponsorship capability to give employers a broader workforce solution in a tighter labour market.
In a labour market where a single unfilled role can slow output, delay projects or limit growth, that broader model may become a critical advantage for Australian businesses trying to stay ahead.
