Recruiting Headlines

Report: technical skills are the hardest thing to assess in an interview

Whether they’re recruiting for a “purple squirrel,” “unicorn” or “rock star,” tech hiring managers say there is often a disconnect between the skills they need and the skills of the people they hire. In new research from Robert Half Technology, 95 percent of IT hiring decision makers admitted to making a bad hire, and 38 percent acknowledged it was due to a skills-based issue, meaning the new hire was unable to do the job as expected.

Interpersonal issues (29 percent) and poor corporate culture fit (28 percent) have also contributed to hiring mistakes, together accounting for over half of bad hires, according to IT leaders.

The challenges may start early on in the hiring process, as 39 percent of IT managers said adequate technical skills are the most difficult thing to evaluate during a job interview. Corporate culture wasn’t far behind, at 37 percent, and 23 percent of survey respondents said soft skills are hardest to gauge.

View an infographic with the full results of interview issues and hiring mistakes.

“Hiring someone who is a poor job fit can hurt your business by hindering productivity and eroding team morale,” said Ryan Sutton, district president, Robert Half Technology. “Current employees who are likely already stretched thin must scramble to fix mistakes or handle extra work.”

Sutton continued, “The interview process should be thorough enough to evaluate technical and soft skills, and determine a candidate’s fit with the organizational culture, while also being fast enough to avoid losing top prospects to other offers.”

Robert Half Technology provides five tips to help hiring managers avoid costly mistakes when recruiting IT talent:

About the Research 

The online survey was developed by Robert Half Technology and conducted by a leading independent research firm. The report is based on responses from more than 2,500 senior managers in 26 major U.S. markets. All respondents were screened to have hiring authority for the information systems or information technology department of a company. The margin of error is +/-1.9 percentage points at the 95 percent confidence level.

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