What Hiring Managers Really Think (And Won't Tell You)
After years of hiring, here's the honest truth about what goes through a hiring manager's mind—the red flags, the things that impress, and the stuff that doesn't matter as much as you think.
A View From the Other Side
I've hired a lot of people. Engineers, marketers, designers, managers. I've reviewed thousands of resumes, conducted hundreds of interviews, and made decisions that changed people's careers.
And here's what I've learned: candidates have no idea what's actually going on in a hiring manager's head.
So let me pull back the curtain.
What We Actually Look For
Evidence, Not Claims
Your resume says you're a "results-driven professional with excellent communication skills." Cool. So does everyone else's.
What catches my attention? Specific evidence.
"Increased user retention by 23% through redesigned onboarding flow" tells me something. "Passionate about user experience" tells me nothing.
When I'm scanning resumes, I'm looking for proof. Numbers. Outcomes. Concrete examples of impact. If you can't quantify it, at least be specific about what you did and what happened.
Problem-Solvers, Not Task-Completers
There's a difference between someone who does what they're told and someone who figures out what needs to be done.
I can teach skills. I can't teach initiative.
In interviews, I'm listening for how you approach problems. Do you wait for instructions or identify issues proactively? Do you just flag problems or come with solutions? Do you think about the bigger picture or just your piece of it?
The best hires I've made were people who saw beyond their job description.
Culture Add, Not Just Culture Fit
"Culture fit" has gotten a bad rap, and for good reason—it's often code for "people like us," which leads to homogeneous teams.
What I actually care about is whether someone will make the team better. Not the same—better.
Will they bring a different perspective? Challenge our assumptions? Raise the bar in some way? That's what matters.
Someone I'd Want to Work With
Here's the honest truth: I'm going to spend a lot of time with whoever I hire. Meetings, Slack conversations, problem-solving sessions, maybe even travel.
So yeah, I care whether I'd enjoy working with you. Not in a "would we be friends" way, but in a "can I see us collaborating effectively" way.
Arrogance is a dealbreaker. So is negativity. So is someone who seems like they'd be difficult to give feedback to.
Technical skills matter. But so does being a reasonable human being.
The Red Flags We Don't Tell You About
Badmouthing Previous Employers
This is the biggest one. When you trash your old company, boss, or colleagues, here's what I hear: "This person might talk about us like this someday."
Even if your previous job was genuinely terrible, find a neutral way to discuss it. Focus on what you learned, what you're looking for, why you're excited about this opportunity—not on how awful they were.
Vague Answers
"Tell me about a challenging project."
"Well, there were a lot of challenging projects. I guess I'd say I handled them pretty well."
That tells me nothing. Either you can't think of specifics (concerning) or you're hiding something (more concerning).
Good candidates have stories ready. They can walk me through situations in detail. If you're vague about your own experience, I have to wonder why.
Not Knowing Anything About Us
I get it—you're applying to lots of jobs. But if you can't tell me why you want to work here specifically, why should I believe you actually do?
I'm not expecting you to have memorized our annual report. But know what we do. Know why you're interested. Have at least one thoughtful question about the role or company.
"I'm just looking for a good opportunity" isn't compelling. "I'm excited about your approach to [specific thing] because [genuine reason]" is.
Overselling and Underselling
Both extremes are problems.
Oversellers make claims they can't back up. They take credit for team efforts. They inflate their impact. It's usually pretty easy to spot—a few probing questions and the story falls apart.
Undersellers won't advocate for themselves. They minimize their accomplishments. They say "we" when they mean "I." This is less of a red flag and more of a missed opportunity—but it does make it harder for me to understand your actual contribution.
Find the middle ground: own your work, be specific, give credit where due.
The Compensation Dance
I understand why candidates are cagey about salary expectations. But extreme avoidance is a yellow flag.
If you refuse to discuss compensation at all, I wonder if we're wildly misaligned and wasting everyone's time. If you throw out a number that's 3x the role's budget, same thing.
It's okay to give a range. It's okay to say you're flexible depending on the total package. It's okay to ask about the budgeted range. Just don't make it a weird power struggle.
What Matters Less Than You Think
Gaps in Your Resume
A year off to travel? Took time for family? Got laid off and it took a while to find something? These are not the career-killers people think they are.
What I care about is whether you can do the job. A gap in employment doesn't tell me much about that.
If anything, I'm more interested in what you did during the gap. Did you learn something? Work on projects? Develop in some way? That's more interesting than an unbroken employment history.
Your GPA (After Your First Job)
Once you have real work experience, nobody cares about your college grades. Seriously. I couldn't tell you the GPA of anyone I've hired in the last decade.
What you did matters more than where you went to school or what grades you got.
The "Perfect" Resume Format
Candidates stress endlessly about resume formatting. Should it be one page? Two? What font? What template?
Here's the truth: I spend maybe 30 seconds on an initial resume scan. I'm looking for relevant experience, clear impact, and whether you can communicate clearly. I'm not judging your design choices.
A clean, readable resume that highlights your relevant experience is fine. Don't overthink it.
Small Talk Skills
Some people are naturally charming. Others are more reserved. Both can be excellent employees.
I'm not evaluating whether you'd be fun at a party. I'm evaluating whether you can do the job, think clearly, and work well with others. Those are different things.
What Actually Impresses Me
Asking Great Questions
The questions you ask tell me a lot about how you think.
Surface-level questions ("What's the culture like?") are fine but forgettable. Questions that show you've thought deeply about the role, the challenges, the team dynamics—those stick with me.
"You mentioned the team is growing quickly. How are you thinking about maintaining quality while scaling?" That's someone who's already thinking like an insider.
Admitting What You Don't Know
Counterintuitive, but true. When someone says "I don't have experience with that specific thing, but here's how I'd approach learning it," I trust them more than someone who pretends to know everything.
Self-awareness and honesty are underrated. I'd rather hire someone who knows their gaps than someone who oversells.
Genuine Enthusiasm
Not fake enthusiasm. Not "I'm SO EXCITED about this AMAZING opportunity!" energy. Genuine interest.
When someone's eyes light up talking about a problem they solved, or they lean in when discussing the challenges of the role, or they ask follow-up questions because they're actually curious—that's compelling.
You can't fake it. And you shouldn't have to. If you're not genuinely interested in the role, maybe it's not the right fit.
Following Up Thoughtfully
A generic "thanks for your time" email is fine. A thoughtful note that references specific parts of our conversation and adds something new? That's memorable.
One candidate sent me a follow-up with a brief analysis of a problem we'd discussed, including some initial ideas for solutions. It wasn't asked for. It showed initiative, thinking, and genuine interest. She got the job.
The Uncomfortable Truths
We Make Decisions Fast
Fair or not, first impressions matter. Within the first few minutes of an interview, I usually have a preliminary sense of whether this is going somewhere.
That doesn't mean the rest doesn't matter—it does. But starting strong is important.
We're Human and Biased
I try to be objective. I use structured interviews, standardized questions, scoring rubrics. But I'm still human. I have unconscious biases. I'm influenced by things I shouldn't be.
The best I can do is be aware of this and actively work against it. But I can't pretend it doesn't exist.
Sometimes It's Not About You
You can do everything right and still not get the job. Maybe there was an internal candidate. Maybe the role got put on hold. Maybe someone else just had more directly relevant experience.
Rejection doesn't mean you failed. It means this particular opportunity wasn't the right fit at this particular time.
We Talk to Each Other
If you're rude to the recruiter, I'll hear about it. If you're dismissive to the junior person who gave you a tour, I'll hear about it. If you're a different person in the "real" interview than in the casual conversations, I'll hear about it.
Be consistent. Treat everyone with respect. We're all comparing notes.
What I Wish Candidates Knew
We Want You to Succeed
I'm not trying to trick you or catch you out. I have a role to fill. My job gets easier if you're great. I'm rooting for you to be the answer.
So don't approach interviews as adversarial. We're both trying to figure out if this is a good fit. That's it.
Preparation Shows
The difference between a prepared candidate and an unprepared one is obvious. Preparation doesn't mean memorizing answers. It means having thought about your experience, the role, and how they connect, the same way you'd prepare for a strong job interview.
When someone clearly prepared, it signals they take this seriously. When someone's winging it, it signals the opposite.
Authenticity Wins
The best interviews feel like conversations. The worst feel like performances.
I don't want the polished, corporate version of you. I want to understand who you actually are, how you actually think, what you actually care about.
Be yourself—the professional version, sure, but yourself. If that's not a fit for this role, better to find out now than six months in.
Final Thoughts
Hiring is imperfect. It's subjective. It's influenced by factors that shouldn't matter. I wish I could tell you there's a formula—do X, Y, Z and you'll get the job.
There isn't.
But there are things you can control: being prepared, being genuine, being clear about your experience and what you want, treating people well.
Do those things consistently, and over time, the right opportunities will come.
And remember: every hiring manager is just a person trying to make a good decision with incomplete information. We're not the enemy. We're potential future colleagues.
Let's figure out together if this could work.
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