From hr-wellbeing
Designs structured, competency-based interview questions, guides, and scorecards to improve hiring quality and reduce bias. Invoke when planning interviews or evaluating candidates.
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Comprehensive guidance for designing structured, competency-based interviews that improve hiring quality, reduce interviewer bias, and produce consistent candidate evaluations across technical and non-technical roles.
Comprehensive guidance for designing structured, competency-based interviews that improve hiring quality, reduce interviewer bias, and produce consistent candidate evaluations across technical and non-technical roles.
A structured interview is a consistent hiring process where every candidate is evaluated using the same competencies, core questions, and scoring criteria.
Rather than relying on intuition or conversational interviews, structured interviewing emphasizes:
Structured interviews generally provide more reliable and fair hiring decisions than unstructured interviews while improving consistency across interview panels.
Every interview should be aligned with:
Questions should evaluate how candidates think, make decisions, communicate, collaborate, and solve problems rather than simply recalling information.
For each competency, generate:
Create one behavioral question that encourages candidates to answer using the STAR framework:
Behavioral questions should focus on real experiences rather than hypothetical opinions.
Create one hypothetical scenario that reflects realistic workplace challenges and assesses judgment, prioritization, and decision-making.
Generate two or three probing questions that:
Avoid repeating the original question.
Describe what excellent responses typically demonstrate, including:
Identify common warning signs such as:
Interview questions may be generated for competencies including:
A balanced interview should include multiple question styles.
Assess past experiences that demonstrate relevant competencies.
Evaluate how candidates would respond to realistic workplace scenarios.
Assess applied knowledge, reasoning, architecture, or domain expertise appropriate to the role.
Evaluate influence, coaching, delegation, decision-making, and organizational impact.
Assess cross-functional communication, stakeholder management, and teamwork.
Explore how candidates operate with incomplete information or changing priorities.
Evaluate accountability, resilience, continuous improvement, and self-reflection.
Evaluation criteria should be defined before interviewing begins.
Scorecards should include:
Interviewers should record evidence rather than opinions whenever possible.
Design interviews that minimize unconscious bias by:
Avoid evaluating candidates based on "gut feeling" or cultural similarity. Structured interviews improve consistency and fairness by standardizing both questions and evaluation criteria.
Do not generate questions related to:
Also avoid:
npx claudepluginhub tuanductran/hr-skills --plugin hr-wellbeingGenerates structured interview plans with competency-based questions, scorecards, panel assignments, and debrief templates for consistent candidate evaluation.
Conducts structured behavioral interviews using the STAR method with standardized questions and scoring. Useful during hiring to ask competency-based questions that predict job performance.
Design interview processes that assess actual capability, reduce bias, and provide good candidate experience. Use when building hiring practices or expanding the team.