How to Choose the Best Candidate for Your Job
Hiring the right person can transform your team — hiring the wrong one can cost time, money, and productivity.
Here’s a simple, effective method to confidently pick the best candidate for any role:
1. Start With a Clear Definition of the Role
Before interviewing anyone, answer:
- What skills are must-have?
- What experience is nice-to-have?
- What responsibilities will they handle?
- What personality fits the team?
A clear role = clear selection.
2. Use a Skills-First Approach (Not Just CV Titles)
The best candidate is not the one with the longest CV —
it’s the one with the right skills.
Check:
- Technical skills
- Soft skills
- Job-specific tools
- Problem-solving ability
Skills + attitude > years of experience.
3. Score Every Candidate With a Simple Evaluation Sheet
Use a 1–5 rating for:
- Skills match
- Communication
- Experience relevance
- Cultural fit
- Problem-solving
- Motivation
This prevents emotional or biased decisions.
4. Look for Evidence, Not Claims
Anyone can say they’re hardworking…
Only strong candidates can prove it.
Check for:
- Achievements
- Measurable results
- Real project examples
- Portfolio/work samples
Results > statements.
5. Ask Behaviour-Based Questions
These show how a candidate behaves in real situations.
Examples:
- “Tell me about a time you solved a difficult problem.”
- “Describe a situation where you handled conflict at work.”
- “How do you stay organized under pressure?”
Past behaviour predicts future behaviour.
6. Use Practical Tests or Mini Assignments
A short task reveals more than an hour-long interview.
Examples:
- Developer → coding test
- Designer → sample graphic
- Customer support → sample chat responses
- Admin → spreadsheet task
- Sales → short pitch
Practical tasks show true ability.
7. Check Motivation & Attitude
Ask questions that reveal:
- Work ethic
- Honesty
- Team spirit
- Growth mindset
- Long-term interest
Skills can be trained — mindset cannot.
8. Involve the Team in the Decision
Let team members meet the top candidates.
They can assess communication style, teamwork potential, and cultural fit.
Team alignment = smoother onboarding.
9. Verify References (Final Assurance)
A quick reference check answers:
- Are they reliable?
- Do they communicate well?
- Do they work well under pressure?
- Any red flags?
Simple but very effective.
10. Trust Skills + Data (Not Just Gut Feeling)
Gut feeling is useful, but not reliable alone.
Combine:
- Evaluation scores
- Skills tests
- Interviews
- References
- Team feedback
