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The science of hiring

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HR Perspective with MEMORY NGUWI

HIRING remains one of the most consequential de­cisions any leader will ever make. The people an organisation hires ultimately determine its ability to execute strategy, serve customers, innovate, manage risk, and achieve sustainable growth. Despite its importance, hiring remains one of the most vulnerable organisational processes. It is susceptible to bias, manipulation, poor gov­ernance, nepotism, and, in some cases, outright corruption. When hiring goes wrong, the consequences are often se­vere and long-lasting. Poor hiring decisions affect produc­tivity, employee morale, customer service, organisational culture, and financial performance. Research consistently shows that replacing a poor hire can cost several times that employee’s annual salary when recruitment expenses, lost productivity, onboarding costs, and management time are considered.

In my 27 years in human resources, I have witnessed the good, the bad, and the ugly in recruitment and selec­tion. One pattern has emerged repeatedly. Individuals who wish to manipulate hiring outcomes often favour unstruc­tured processes. They prefer vague policies or no policies at all. They resist standardisation, dislike transparency, and favour subjective decision-making. In such environments, interviewers ask random questions, selection criteria shift from candidate to candidate, and decisions are frequently made based on personal preferences rather than objective evidence. These weaknesses create opportunities for bias and make it easier for unsuitable candidates to be selected while highly capable candidates are overlooked.

The good news is that hiring is one area organisations can significantly improve. Unlike many external factors that leaders cannot control, recruitment processes can be designed, monitored, and governed. Organisations that consistently attract and select high-quality talent create a substantial competitive advantage for themselves. Studies in industrial and organisational psychology have repeatedly demonstrated that workforce quality is one of the stron­gest predictors of organizational performance. The best organisations understand that every hiring decision either strengthens or weakens their future capability. They there­fore invest heavily in systems and processes that maximise the probability of making the right selection decisions.

One of the most important principles in hiring is main­taining high standards. Leaders should resist the temptation to lower the bar simply because there is pressure to fill a vacancy quickly. A vacant position can be inconvenient, but hiring the wrong person is often far more costly. Research shows that organisations that maintain rigorous selection standards generally achieve better long-term performance outcomes than those that prioritise speed over quality. Hir­ing managers should always aim to identify the best candi­date available rather than merely selecting someone who appears adequate. The goal should not be to fill a position but to strengthen the organisation and its capability to de­liver value.

A cornerstone of evidence-based hiring is the structured interview. Decades of research have consistently shown that structured interviews are significantly more reliable and valid predictors of job performance than unstructured interviews. In a structured interview, every question is de­rived directly from the requirements of the role. Candidates are asked the same questions in the same order and are evaluated against predefined scoring criteria. This approach minimises subjectivity and ensures that all candidates are assessed fairly and consistently. Questions unrelated to the role should be prohibited because they contribute little to predicting performance while increasing the potential for bias and discrimination.

Organisations should also pay careful attention to the composition and training of interview panels. For profes­sional and managerial positions, interview panels should generally consist of at least three members, with larger panels used where appropriate. Multiple assessors reduce the risk that a single individual’s biases will dominate the outcome. However, simply assembling a panel is not enough. Every panel member should receive formal train­ing in interviewing techniques, unconscious bias, assess­ment principles, and scoring methodologies. Far too many organisations allow individuals to participate in interviews without any formal training. This undermines the integrity of the process and increases the likelihood of inconsistent evaluations.

Best practice also requires strong governance through­out the assessment process. Interview questions should be developed shortly before the interviews to preserve confi­dentiality and reduce the risk of information leakage. Panel members should independently score candidates without discussing their ratings with one another during the assess­ment process. Independent scoring prevents groupthink and reduces the influence of dominant personalities within the panel. Once assessments are completed, a neutral party such as Human Resources or a consultant should consol­idate the results. Where multiple assessors are involved, using the median score rather than the mean can reduce the impact of unusually high or low ratings that may distort the overall outcome.

Beyond interviews, organisations should increasing­ly embrace assessment methods with stronger predictive validity. Research conducted over several decades has consistently found that cognitive ability assessments are among the most powerful predictors of job performance across a wide range of occupations. Individuals with stron­ger cognitive capabilities generally learn faster, have better problem-solving skills, adapt more quickly to change, and perform better in complex roles. Yet many organisations continue to place disproportionate emphasis on qualifications and years of experience while ne­glecting measures that provide stronger evidence of future performance.

Where resources permit, psychometric as­sessments should be conducted before inter­views rather than after them. This sequence allows organisations to identify candidates who meet predetermined standards before investing significant time in interviews. Too many organi­sations conduct interviews first and assessments later. From a scientific perspective, this is often the wrong way around. Psychometric assess­ments frequently demonstrate greater reliabili­ty and predictive validity than interviews. As a result, they should ideally function as a hurdle rather than being combined mechanically with interview scores. Candidates who fail to meet the required assessment standards should not proceed further in the selection process.

For leadership, management, and custom­er-facing positions, personality assessments can provide valuable information that interviews alone may fail to uncover. Personality traits such as conscientiousness, emotional stability, integ­rity, resilience, and interpersonal effectiveness have been linked to important workplace out­comes. While personality assessments should never be used in isolation, they can help organ­isations gain a deeper understanding of how candidates are likely to behave in real workplace situations. This is particularly valuable when hir­ing individuals who will influence teams, shape organisational culture, or interact extensively with customers and stakeholders.

Ultimately, organisations can dramatical­ly improve the quality of their hiring decisions by adopting stronger governance, more rigor­ous assessment methods, and greater discipline throughout the recruitment process. The evi­dence is clear: structured interviews outperform unstructured ones, objective measures outper­form subjective judgments, and well-governed systems outperform loosely managed approach­es.

Hiring is far too important to be left to chance. Every appointment represents an investment in the organisation’s future. Leaders who treat hir­ing with the seriousness it deserves give their organisations a far greater chance of building a high-performing organisation and achieving last­ing success.

lNguwi is the managing consultant of Indus­trial Psychology Consultants and a registered occupational psychologist.

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