I would applaud the author on trying to take a data-driven approach to discover the best hiring signals, but I must offer one major critique of the approach: These data are ultimately not too meaningful unless you correlate actual job performance with interview performance. By the author's own admission, interviews are often faulty. By correlating final-round interview performance with early-round interview performance, you are really only predicting how candidates will perform in the final-round interview, which is not necessarily a good predictor of long-term job performance.
lqdc13|10 years ago
They're optimizing for hiring, not job performance.
vonmoltke|10 years ago
serge2k|10 years ago
If you are serious about this then you should be interviewing candidates, deciding on whether you think they should get a job. Then giving them a job anyway and evaluating their performance after some time interval and see how accurate your interview process was in terms of weeding out those who would fail.
Harj|10 years ago
rifung|10 years ago
It seems reasonable to optimize for hiring right now since otherwise nobody would go to them to find a job, and it'd also be impossible to measure job performance when the people you collect data can not get jobs.