Lately, I’ve spent a lot of time looking through resumes, and honestly, I’m exhausted.
I’m bringing on two new members to my team while going through the hiring process for summer interns. My calendar is normally stacked, but the past few weeks? Forget about it.
And that’s the way it should be. If done correctly, expect the hiring process to take a long time. When you’re short-staffed and drowning in emails, the temptation to hire any warm body is huge. But hiring out of desperation can be a surefire way to bring down even a top-performing team.
But it doesn’t just cost morale, it costs actual money. A bad hire can actually be more expensive than no hire at all. If you rush it, you aren’t solving a problem; you’re delaying a bigger one, and you’ll spend more time fixing their mistakes than you would have by leaving the seat empty.
Following the suggestions I’m about to talk about made my process longer, sure. There were days when I wondered if I was being too picky. But now that the onboarding is set to begin, I’m actually sleeping better.
I’m confident with the decisions I made and excited about what they will bring to the team. That’s the goal, right?
The Financial and Operational Costs of a Bad Hire
If you’re looking for official numbers, Gallup consistently reports that the cost of replacing an individual employee can range from one-half to two times the employee’s annual salary.
The Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM) reports similar figures, suggesting that the cost of employee turnover can amount to 150% of that employee’s annual compensation. For managerial roles, that number is significantly higher, at 200 to 250% of annual compensation.
But if you actually run a business or manage a team, you know these numbers are just lines on a spreadsheet. The true cost runs much higher.
Here are the opportunity costs you can’t easily measure on a P&L:
- Lost Sanity: You spend your 9 to 5 time and mental energy managing the fallout instead of growing the business.
- Strained Resources: You are down one or two people if it’s a backfill, meaning everyone else works twice as hard.
- Project Delays: You are waiting to pick up key initiatives until the new employee is fully up to speed.
It’s no secret that the labor market is erratic right now. I’ve seen surveys saying 70% of employers dealt with ghosting last year, but if you’re running a business, it feels like 100% of the time, some weeks. It’s easy to blame the economy or “kids these days,” but at a certain point, we have to look at how we’re actually bringing people in.
The old way of doing things – posting a blurb and praying for the best – is pretty much finished.
Effective Interview Questions to Find Reliable Employees
If you’re still using a generic interview script, you’re basically asking to be lied to. I’m guilty of it myself, but my most recent hiring experience really opened my eyes.
When you ask someone, “What is your greatest weakness?” they aren’t going to tell you they have a habit of oversleeping or that they don’t take direction well. They’re going to give you their rehearsed line about being “too much of a perfectionist.”
During these recent interviews, I threw out the script. I started asking things that actually force people to think on their feet:
- The “Profound Disagreement” Test: I want to hear about the last time they had a profound disagreement with a manager. I’m not looking for who was “right.” I’m listening to *how* they talk about their old boss. If every single person they’ve ever worked for was the problem, you might just have your own problem on your hands if you make the wrong choice.
- The “Massive Mistake” Question: I ask about a massive mistake they made on the clock. I don’t particularly care about the mistake itself; you can’t have success without failure. I care about the ownership. If they start blaming the software, the supplier, or the guy sitting next to them, that’s a red flag to watch for. I want someone who says, “I messed up, here’s how I fixed it, and here’s why I won’t do it again.”
- The Lobby Check: Keep your eyes open before the “official” interview even starts. How did they act at reception? Were they five minutes late without a reason or apology? Character shows up in those tiny moments. You can train someone to use your software, but none of us gets paid enough to train someone not to be a jerk.
How to Verify Candidate Skills and Work History
We’ve all heard that people “fluff” their resumes. But many resumes today are more than just fluffed. People actually invent degrees, inflate their titles and claim they managed teams when they were really just the person who knew where the office supplies were.
Add AI into the mix, and it gets wilder. According to a recent ZipRecruiter survey of new hires, 66% of job seekers used AI to help with their job search. Candidates are using it to write their resumes (24%), identify job openings (23%) and prepare for interviews (19%).
You have to verify everything now.
- Call the actual company: And no, calling the cell phone number given doesn’t count. Ask for HR or the manager. A lot of big companies will only give you dates of employment because they’re scared of getting sued, but pay attention to the tone. Silence, or a long pause before they confirm someone worked there, may tell you everything you need to know.
- Test their skills: If someone says they’re a “spreadsheet savant,” don’t just take their word for it. Open a laptop, give them some data, and say, “Show me.” Talk is cheap. Watching someone actually do the work is the only way to know whether they’re full of it or not.
Using AI and Smart Job Boards to Filter Applicants
I used to be the person who would send a vague job description to HR and then act surprised when I got an endless list of applications from people who didn’t even live in the same time zone. It’s a waste of everybody’s time. Sifting through applications and resumes is actually the second most time-consuming recruiting task for employers.
When I was doing this last round of hiring, I realized I had to change how I was casting the net. I needed a platform that actually did the heavy lifting for me, which is why I started using ZipRecruiter.
Instead of just shouting into the void on a single message board, I let their tech do the filtering. If you are tired of sifting through unqualified resumes, here is how changing your approach actually looks in practice:
| The Old Way | The Smarter Way Using ZipRecruiter |
|---|---|
| Posting blindly: Shouting into the void on a single message board. | Wider reach: Sends jobs to 100+ job boards with one click. |
| Sifting junk: Wasting hours reading unqualified resumes. | Smart matching: AI technology finds candidates with the right skills and experience, then prompts them to apply. |
| Waiting for talent: Hoping a top-tier candidate notices your ad. | Proactive outreach: The “Invite to Apply” feature sends a personal message to top candidates, bringing in 8x more great matches instantly. |
| Slow pipelines: Taking weeks to find someone competent. | Speed: Four out of five employers who post get a quality candidate within the very first day. |
But even with a good tool, you have to do your part. You have to be brutally honest in the job description. Don’t try to make the job sound like a vacation if it’s a grind.
If the role involves standing for eight hours in a loud warehouse, put that in the first paragraph. If Saturday shifts are mandatory, make it crystal clear. If you aren’t great at writing these, tools like ZipRecruiter offer over 1,000 templates to highlight the exact requirements and perks specific to the role you’re hiring.
You want to scare away the people who aren’t a match before they even tap “apply.” It feels counterintuitive to try to get fewer applicants, but you’d rather have 15 solid candidates than 150 people who are going to quit the first time the work gets hard.
Onboarding Best Practices to Retain New Hires
Getting someone to sign an offer letter is only the start.
About 20% of people quit within the first month and a half. They get overwhelmed, or they realize the “cool startup vibe” actually just means “we have no systems and everyone is stressed.” Or they find another place paying more for less work.
Your onboarding can’t just be a pile of tax forms and a tour of the floor. Get them involved immediately.
- Set clear goals. Tell them exactly what “winning” looks like by the end of week two.
- Check in regularly. Not to micromanage, but just to ask, “What’s annoying you today? What can I clear out of your way?”
That said, don’t confuse being supportive with being subservient. The “trial period” is exactly that. If they’re chronically late starting in week three or they’re already starting drama with the rest of the team, cut them loose. Things like this tend not to get better by month six.
It took me a long time to get these two new people on board, and it was a grind, but looking at the team I have now? I’d do it the exact same way again – and I will when the time comes.
Frequently Asked Questions About Hiring and Recruiting
Should I include salary information in my job descriptions?
Absolutely. Nearly 74% of companies are currently including pay information in their job descriptions. Even better, job posts that list salary information are 2.7 times more likely to deliver quality candidates.
How can I make my job posting stand out?
Start by keeping the title concise. Job titles with 70 characters or fewer receive 4 times more applications.
Is it normal to struggle with finding good candidates right now?
Yes. In fact, 52% of employers say their biggest recruitment challenge is a lack of quality candidates. This is why tapping into proactive sourcing, like searching a database with over 53 million resumes, is critical, like ZipRecruiter, according to January 2025 internal data. More than 90% of employers agree that having a resume database for proactive outreach speeds up the hiring process.
Are candidates really using AI to apply, and should I be worried?
Yes, candidates are using AI. According to Career Group Companies’ 2026 Market Trend Report and Salary Guide, 66% of job seekers use AI to help with their search, particularly for writing resumes and cover letters. However, two in three employers report they are completely open to candidates using generative AI to write their application materials. Focus on the human element and skills tests during the interview to verify they can actually do the job.
[Notigroup Newsroom in collaboration with other media outlets, with information from the following sources]






