Hiring teams waste time and lose great candidates because the interview process lacks structure. Even experienced hiring teams, set budgets, and well-defined job descriptions can’t outrun a loose hiring process.
Whether you’re hiring a data engineer or a technical project manager, this four-step framework creates the structure you need without the cumbersome, and often lengthy interview process that scares off the best talent.
Step 1: Hiring Manager Screening
Time: 30 minutes
This video call is a fit check, not a full interview. By the time a candidate reaches you, your staffing partner has already vetted qualifications, interest, and compensation alignment. Your job here is validation. If the fit isn’t clear, don’t advance.
Step 2: The Technical Assessment
Time: 1 hour
A live exercise, coding challenge, system design, or paired problem solving should be the next step in the process. Candidates at this stage should already have a high probability of success. This step of the interview process should act as a confirmation of skills rather than a filter.
Step 3: Panel Interview
Time: 1.5-2 hours
Conducted via video or in-person, this is the heart of the interview process where your team gets involved. Focus on problem-solving ability, communication, and collaboration. If there is a take-home assignment, review it here. Use this time to talk about the day-to-day responsibilities and activities of the role. Give the candidate room to ask questions.
Stage 4: Final Interview
Time: 1 hour
This is an in-person or video conversation between the candidate, the hiring manager, and the hiring manager’s leadership. This is a final assessment of professionalism, motivation, cultural fit, and readiness. This is a closing stage, and it needs to be treated as such.
Keep in Mind
Don’t overcomplicate the process. Trust your instincts and use the interview framework as your guide.
- A maybe is a no. Trust your gut. If you’re not sure, the answer is no.
- Look for reasons to say yes. Evaluate with curiosity, not skepticism.
- Don’t repeat work that your staffing partner has already done.
- Share candidate strengths forward, not concerns. Let each interviewer form their own impression with baked in bias.
A well-run process respects everyone’s time, reduces drop-off, and leads to better hires. If your current structure doesn’t reflect this, let’s have a conversation about how to make it better.
—
Talener works with technical teams across the US to place skilled professionals in contract, contract-to-hire, and direct hire roles. Reach out to learn how we can support your hiring