What operators need to know
Head hunting for cultivation and post-harvest leadership focuses on GMP literacy, incident response experience, and cross-functional fluency between agronomy, engineering, and compliance—not just generic recruiting keywords.
When you present head hunting to cultivation leaders, post-harvest managers, and capital partners, anchor the story in measurable outcomes: room performance, batch release criteria, worker safety, and traceability—not generic cannabis hype. This page summarizes what horticulture and processing teams typically need documented before contracts and permit sets harden.
Scope for head hunting usually intersects field installation, commissioning, and facility readiness. Aligning mechanical, electrical, plumbing, and security narratives early prevents expensive rework when jurisdictions compare drawings to written procedures.
Cultivation & greenhouse presentation points
- Environmental setpoints and alarm thresholds that cultivation agrees to defend in Head hunting submittals.
- Room-by-room flow: mother, clone, veg, flower, dry, trim, vault, quarantine—where Head hunting changes travel or biosecurity.
- Utility capacity letters matching peak irrigation, lighting, and dehumidification loads tied to Head hunting.
- IPM and sanitation interfaces: how Head hunting affects washdown, no-pesticide buffers, and equipment access panels.
- Training ownership: which SOPs must be updated before first plant or first batch after Head hunting.
- Commissioning evidence—what photos, tests, and signoffs regulators expect on walkthrough day.
Post-harvest & processing alignment
- Moisture and water activity targets after harvest—and how Head hunting supports or constrains dry room curves.
- WIP staging between trim, extraction infeed, and packaging so Head hunting does not create cross-traffic or QA blind spots.
- Waste classification for stalks, fan leaves, and solvent streams if Head hunting touches MIP boundaries.
- Sanitation validation where Head hunting introduces new corners, drains, or equipment that must be swabbed or pass visual inspection.
- Lot traceability: how Head hunting shows up in batch records, deviation logs, and hold/release criteria.
Checklist before the boardroom or regulator walkthrough
- Single-line scope statement for Head hunting with inclusions, exclusions, and owner-furnished items.
- Reference drawings revision and discipline (architectural, mechanical, electrical, process).
- Risk register: schedule, code, supply chain, and commissioning risks with mitigations.
- Crosswalk to security plan, odor control narrative, and waste SOP where Head hunting creates new openings or penetrations.
- Budget phasing aligned to cultivation first plant vs post-harvest first batch milestones.
- Operator RACI: who signs daily logs, who accepts vendor turnover packages for Head hunting.
- Emergency scenarios: power loss, irrigation leak, or HVAC failure during first 30 days after Head hunting.
How Order Junky fits your program
Order Junky exists to shorten the distance between facility plans and the products on your loading dock. When horticulture and post-harvest leads know what they need, wholesale buying should be searchable, repeatable, and tied to real SKUs, not lost in spreadsheets.
- Browse the Order Junky catalog for lighting, HVAC components, irrigation parts, benches, consumables, and sanitation chemistry that show up in head hunting submittals.
- Use Service Partners to align installation, staffing, and verification affiliates with the same procurement timeline your GC or owner rep is tracking.
- Contact Order Junky when you need a human to help route large or milestone-based orders alongside construction.