Structured Interviews
4 articles tagged with “Structured Interviews”
Why Most Competency Frameworks Fail in Practice (And What to Use Instead)
Competency frameworks read as rigorous but rarely change how interviews actually run: they decay as roles shift, and they hand interviewers abstractions instead of usable questions. A lighter, question-level instrument tied to the actual job holds up better, and structured screening keeps it consistent across every candidate.
The Calibration Problem: Why Two Hiring Managers See the Same Candidate Differently
When two interviewers score the same candidate differently, the gap usually isn't about facts. It's about the lack of a shared rubric. Here's what the calibration problem actually costs, what the research says about closing it, and where structured screening fits in the loop.
The Real Reason Your Diversity Hiring Numbers Are Not Moving
Most DEI hiring initiatives focus on sourcing, but the data shows diverse candidates often exit during resume review and phone screens, before the hiring manager ever sees them. Structured screening criteria applied consistently to every candidate is what changes the outcome.
Structured vs Unstructured Interviews: What 80 Years of Research Actually Says
Most companies still run unstructured interviews, despite eight decades of research showing they are weak predictors of job performance. This article examines what the evidence actually says, why the practice persists, and what changes when hiring teams commit to structure.