Economist Tyler Cowen reveals how ditching scripted interviews & sparking natural conversations can unlock hidden talent & elevate your hiring game.

automation, remote, flexible, gig, AI, collaboration, digital, technology, skills, retraining, job, evolution, disruption, workforce, talent

There are so many interview questions that everyone is prepared for. Let me give you an example. What was a mistake you made in your previous job? A lot of candidates just aren't prepared and they won't have a good answer. So in most cases with better candidates, you're really just testing for prep. What does their prep look like? But if all you're doing is testing for prep, then all you're going to get are a bunch of conscientious people who are well prepared. For a lot of jobs, that's just great. It's fine. But for more creative jobs, you will be losing out on the bolder, more daring candidates who have other qualities because all you did was test for prep. For many jobs, great. For other jobs, that's terrible. Every potential interview question has pitfalls. There's no such thing as a list of the best interview questions. And if what you think interviewing is, well, here are the three perfect questions, I'm going to ask them to everyone in the same way, that is exactly not correct. How you get people into what I call the authenticity mode is going to depend a great deal on who they are and also who you are. If I'm interviewing a candidate, my favorite discussions are simply those that are unscripted. I prefer to have those conversations arise without me having to ask a question. I want them to be natural. I don't want it to feel threatening or high pressure. I just want us to start talking about something. I like the idea of changing interview venues when there's time. Get up, get a cup of coffee, go to another room. Hope some kind of decision arises spontaneously and you see how the candidate meets and makes that decision. You want to watch how candidates talk to other people, not just the person interviewing them. So I like spontaneity. Exactly how to achieve that will depend on the context, the job, how much time you have and many other things. But you would like some sense of how they perceive the social hierarchies around them, how they feel they fit into those hierarchies, how ambitious they are, how they think about their roles in teams, and any way that you can get the person talking about a topic where those issues come up. But I think it's important not to obsess on your favorite pet question and getting your favorite pet answer. You just want to see how the candidates process ideas, how do they think, how do they value, how do they treat other people, how do they talk about their relationships with other people. Those are the places in an interview where I like to be. There's one estimate that suggests somewhere between 20 and 40% of American economic growth since the 1960s has come about from allocating talent better. If we had fresher and more creative interview processes, I do think people would be more thoughtful, they would think more deeply about the jobs they're about to take, think we would spot talent we're not currently seeing, we would elevate more people into greater opportunity. Should we really be so arrogant and so conceited as to think we've now mastered this art and no further progress is possible? Of course not. That's why I think the key is not, here's the three questions that tell you everything, but a general commitment to being trustworthy, authentic, trying to draw out the authenticity of the other person and getting into the conversational mode. And a way to make progress on that is to seem trustworthy by actually being trustworthy. Because one thing human beings are great at is sniffing out hypocrisy in the people they're speaking to. So for you as an interviewer to actually be trustworthy is one of the highest value things you can be and do. And if there's a single piece of advice I would give that is pretty much robust across all situations, it would be that one.

Success lies in building rare skills—your Career Capital. Research your path, learn from those ahead, and align efforts with what truly matters to avoid dead ends. Jordan Peterson simplifies the solution to conquering social anxiety, offering advice on effortlessly overcoming social fears. A.I isn’t a human replacement. It’s a tool to augment your knowledge. Jim Kwik shows how A.I enhances learning and skills to accelerate goal achievement. 3. Content is king! My cover connected me with music legend Diane Warren & my brand landed me in Rolling Stone. Here is how strategic social media content can propel your brand. Discover essential keys for accelerating your company's growth and ensuring sound decision-making from Mark Zuckerberg. Y Combinator CEO and Partner Michael Seibel on what makes the top 10% of founders different. Empowering Beyond Borders: My journey to 120 countries inspired the creation of an NGO framework for women in Ghana, transforming product mgmt into mission to achieve impossible Explore Twitch's remarkable journey in gaming livestreaming, from startup to Amazon acquisition, with one of its co-founders, Michael Seibel. Scott H. Young speaks about the #1 rule for writing — write about what you like to read, regardless of what others think. Scaling your startup after product-market fit. As Head of Marketing for Blueberry Markets, I share my 5-step growth strategy framework & a 70% referral program success story. People don’t buy what you do, they buy why you do it. Simon Sinek explains how Apple communicates to inspire action. Do you know your “why” or just your “what”? Kevin Zollman, philosophy professor, co-author of The Game Theorist's Guide, reveals winning strategies against smart opponents. Dare to hold onto courage in your leadership, a founder story of Rob Jelinski, a passionate business leader with over 20 years of experience in entrepreneurship. April Dunford, world-leading expert on positioning for B2B tech companies, explains why the Hero's Journey framework works for traditional storytelling, but not for B2B sales. It doesn’t matter if you fail, it matters how you fail. Harvard professor Amy Edmondson shows how "intelligent failures" (like a scientist testing hypotheses) are key to success. You might think the pursuit of self-sufficiency and business creation are contradictory. Tom Greenwood shows how entrepreneurship can create a healthier model for society. 2. As a marketing leader & music producer, here are 3 steps I used to build my brand. Define what makes you unique & be consistent. Authenticity is key: share your story to connect! Talk to anyone in every type of interaction and situation with these communication tips and body language tricks! A defining moment as cofounder in my brand agency sparked a passion to help others navigate the complexities of co-founding. Now I coach cofounders to build successful partnerships This is my journey from a 13 year professional baseball career to a co-founder of a company designed to develop and place ex athletes into the medical device industry