Interviews are like first dates, where the candidate and the interviewer try to pass off the best versions of themselves. Candidates sell you on their immaculate resumes and some canned responses. You sell them on unlimited coconut water and a foosball table. No one really knows if it’ll work out or not.
But the burden of proof falls on you as the interviewer, not the interviewee. If you want to hire the cream of the crop, you need to learn how to uncover the strengths and weaknesses that correlate with great employees. It’s challenging to hire based on instinct—especially if you haven't made many hiring decisions in the past.
This is disastrous for your company in the long run. According to CareerBuilder, a bad hire costs most businesses between $25,000 and $50,000. You can't afford that kind of waste.
One of the best ways around this is to convince new hires not to work with you. It sounds insane, but it's proven to work. It's known as an anti-pitch, and it's how Jeff Bezos built one of the best engineering teams in the world:
There was no disillusionment over what Amazon was when the prospect eventually joined. Those who chose Amazon in spite of the anti-pitch knew what they were getting into, and had in fact self-selected for the challenge. Amazon became known as a company whose engineers were intense and elite.
This strategy is backed up by research from Stanford and Tel Aviv University. When people are exposed to “weaknesses” in a product, service, or company, they have context that helps them trust that the positive features are as good as advertised.
It's time to shift your thinking about recruiting. For the sake of your business, hiring can’t be a gamble—you and the candidate need to get your hands dirty, or you won't know what working together will be like until it's too late. Here's how to get the real conversation going.
How to Play the “Game of Weakness”
As an interviewer, it's up to you to navigate the bullshit and figure out what the candidate isn't good at.
This is where the Game of Weakness comes in. The goal is for you to convince the candidate not to work with you and for the candidate to convince you not to hire them. It sounds entirely counterintuitive, but it leads to an actually valuable, productive conversation every time. No candidate is perfect—and your company isn’t either.
Start trying to figure out the imperfections early on. This creates an open and transparent environment where everyone can all work to be better, rather than one in which they’re all just BSing each other.
Here are the simple rules of the game.
Know Your Own Weaknesses First
You need to lead the way. Don't expect candidates to share a real weakness unless you guide the way. Get in the mindset that you're both being interviewed.
Creating a false perception of yourself and your company is just as costly—you don't want new hires leaving when they discover the truth. Laying it all out on the table completely shifts the interview into a conversation that's radically different from what you’ve done before.
For this to work, you need to know your weaknesses. Get ready to swallow your pride. Use a Google Form to collect feedback anonymously from your team.
You can prompt them with questions like “Do you feel your salary is fair?” and “Do you have enough autonomy?” but leave room for open answers as well. Getting feedback can be tough, but it strengthens your company and your hiring process.
You'll probably run into responses like these:
Try to identify the two or three points you hear most often—this is the pain that new hires will experience shortly. Talking about it openly in an interview ensures it's not a surprise.
Round #1
The Game of Weakness gets real, fast. Kick it off by telling the candidate something they don't want to hear. Remember, you are trying to convince them not to work with you.
Next, ask them to share a reason not to hire them. Ask them what negative feedback a former employee or manager would give about them or why they might not get along with your team.
Here's how that conversation might go.