recruiting-ops

Use this skill when writing job descriptions, building sourcing strategies, designing screening processes, or creating interview frameworks. Triggers on job descriptions, candidate sourcing, screening criteria, interview loops, recruiting pipelines, offer management, and any task requiring talent acquisition process design.

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Recruiting Operations

Recruiting operations is the structured practice of attracting, evaluating, and hiring the right people efficiently and fairly. It spans the full talent acquisition lifecycle - from defining the role through sourcing, screening, interviewing, and extending an offer. This skill provides actionable frameworks for each phase: writing inclusive job descriptions, building multi-channel sourcing strategies, designing structured screening criteria, running calibrated interview loops, managing the offer process, tracking pipeline metrics, and building employer brand. Built for hiring managers and recruiters who want to move from ad-hoc hiring to a repeatable, data-informed, candidate-respecting process.


When to use this skill

Trigger this skill when the user:

  • Needs to write or improve a job description for any role
  • Wants to build or audit a sourcing strategy for a hard-to-fill position
  • Is designing screening criteria, take-home exercises, or phone screen scripts
  • Needs to structure an interview loop with defined stages and interviewer roles
  • Is managing an offer, negotiating compensation, or closing a reluctant candidate
  • Wants to measure recruiting funnel health with metrics like time-to-hire or offer acceptance rate
  • Is building or improving employer brand, careers pages, or recruiting content
  • Needs a scorecard, rubric, or calibration process for consistent candidate evaluation

Do NOT trigger this skill for:

  • Performance management, PIPs, or managing underperforming employees (use people-ops or HR skill)
  • Compensation benchmarking as a standalone exercise without a hiring context (use total-rewards skill)

Key principles

  1. Structured process reduces bias - Unstructured interviews measure confidence and likability, not job performance. Every hiring decision should rest on a defined scorecard with consistent signals evaluated the same way across all candidates. Standardize questions, calibrate interviewers, and separate data collection from evaluation to prevent halo effects and affinity bias.

  2. Speed is a competitive advantage - The best candidates are off the market in 7-14 days. Slow loops, delayed feedback, and scheduling gaps lose top talent to faster competitors. Measure time-in-stage, eliminate unnecessary interview rounds, and make offer decisions within 24 hours of a final interview.

  3. Sell while you evaluate - Every touchpoint is a chance to lose or win a candidate. Interviewers who show up unprepared, ask hostile questions, or fail to explain the role's impact drive rejection rates up. Train every interviewer on the pitch: mission, team, growth path, and why this role matters now.

  4. Data-driven pipeline - Track conversion rates at every funnel stage. If application-to-screen rate is high but screen-to-onsite is low, the phone screen is miscalibrated. If offer acceptance rate is below 80%, the offer or closing process is broken. Metrics tell you where the process leaks before it costs you headcount.

  5. Candidate experience matters - Candidates who have a bad experience - ghosting, rude interviewers, confusing processes - become vocal detractors. Candidates who have a great experience become fans, even if not hired. Timely communication, clear expectations, and respectful feedback are the baseline.


Core concepts

Recruiting funnel

Sourced / Applied
      |
  Screened (resume + application review)
      |
  Phone / Video Screen
      |
  Technical / Skills Screen  (optional, role-dependent)
      |
  Onsite / Final Loop
      |
  Reference Check
      |
  Offer Extended
      |
  Offer Accepted
      |
  Day 1

Each stage has a target conversion rate. Deviation from baseline signals a broken stage, not a broken candidate pool. Track volume and conversion at every gate.

Sourcing channels

ChannelBest forCostTime to fill
Employee referralsCulture fit, passive candidatesLowFast
LinkedIn RecruiterSenior / specialized rolesMediumMedium
Job boards (LinkedIn, Indeed, Greenhouse)High-volume, entry/mid-levelLow-MediumFast
Niche communities (Discord, Slack, forums)Technical / domain-specific rolesLowSlow
Recruiting agenciesExecutive, urgent, highly specializedHighVariable
GitHub / Dribbble / portfolio sitesEngineers, designersLowSlow
Conferences and meetupsSenior, passive, community-active talentMediumSlow

Sourcing rule: Use at least three channels per role. Referrals should be one channel but never the only channel - they homogenize the candidate pool.

Screening criteria

A screening rubric must be defined before outreach begins. It contains:

  • Must-haves: Hard requirements. Failing any disqualifies. Keep this list short (3-5 items).
  • Strong-to-haves: Differentiating signals that raise conviction. Not disqualifying.
  • Anti-signals: Patterns that suggest misalignment with the role or team.
  • Selling points: What to emphasize to this candidate profile to drive conversion.

Calibration rule: Every must-have must be directly tied to a core job responsibility. "5+ years of experience" is a proxy, not a criterion. Replace proxies with skills or demonstrated behaviors wherever possible.

Interview loops

An interview loop maps each competency to an interviewer and a set of defined questions. No interviewer should evaluate a competency they were not assigned. No competency should be left unassigned.

Loop design steps:
1. List 5-7 competencies required for success in the role.
2. Assign each competency to exactly one interviewer.
3. Write 3-5 behavioral or technical questions per competency.
4. Define what a strong, acceptable, and weak response looks like.
5. Hold a pre-loop calibration with all interviewers before the first candidate.
6. Hold a debrief within 24 hours of each loop. Collect written scores first,
   then discuss to prevent anchoring.

Common tasks

Write an inclusive job description

Template structure:

[ROLE TITLE]

About [Company]:
  2-3 sentences. Mission, stage, and what makes this team worth joining.
  Avoid superlatives ("best", "world-class"). Use specific, factual claims.

What you will do:
  5-7 bullet points. Focus on impact, not activities.
  Start each bullet with a verb: "Design", "Own", "Partner with", "Drive".
  At least one bullet should describe scope and autonomy.

What we are looking for:
  Must-haves: 3-5 items. Frame as skills or behaviors, not years of experience.
  Nice-to-haves: 2-3 items. Clearly labeled as optional.
  Do NOT include gender-coded language ("rockstar", "ninja", "dominant").

Compensation and benefits:
  State the salary range explicitly. Opacity signals disrespect.
  List equity, benefits, and any remote/hybrid/in-office policy.

How to apply:
  Clear next step. Timeline expectation. Who they will hear from.

Inclusivity checklist before publishing:

  • Remove gendered language (run through a gender decoder tool)
  • Eliminate jargon or acronyms without context
  • List a salary range - candidates from underrepresented groups are less likely to apply without one
  • Review the must-haves list: does every item directly predict job performance?
  • Add an explicit accommodation statement for accessibility

See references/job-description-templates.md for engineering, product, and marketing role templates.

Build a sourcing strategy

Channel selection by role type:

Engineering (senior/staff):  LinkedIn Recruiter + GitHub + employee referrals + niche Slack/Discord
Engineering (entry/mid):     Job boards + university pipelines + bootcamp partnerships
Product:                     LinkedIn + referrals + product communities (Lenny's, MindTheProduct)
Design:                      Dribbble + Behance + LinkedIn + design communities
Marketing:                   LinkedIn + job boards + industry conferences
Sales:                       LinkedIn + referrals + SDR-specific job boards

Outreach message structure:

Subject: [Specific hook - why you are reaching out to them specifically]

Body:
  1. Why you reached out to THEM (reference their work, post, or project - be specific)
  2. What the role is in 1-2 sentences (company, team, problem they will work on)
  3. Why now (why this role matters at this stage of the company)
  4. One soft CTA: "Would you be open to a 20-minute conversation?"

Do NOT:
  - Use copy-paste templates with no personalization
  - Lead with "exciting opportunity" or "great culture"
  - Ask for a resume in the first message
  - Send follow-ups more than twice

Referral program design:

  • Bonus amount: $1,000-$5,000 depending on role level, paid after 90-day cliff
  • Notify the referrer at every stage transition, even if the candidate is rejected
  • Close the loop: if you pass on a referral, tell the referrer why (at a high level)

Design screening criteria

Scorecard template:

Role: [Title]
Hiring manager: [Name]
Date calibrated: [Date]

MUST-HAVES (disqualifying if absent):
  [ ] [Skill or behavior] - Evidence to look for: [specific signal]
  [ ] [Skill or behavior] - Evidence to look for: [specific signal]
  [ ] [Skill or behavior] - Evidence to look for: [specific signal]

STRONG-TO-HAVES (differentiating, not disqualifying):
  [ ] [Skill or behavior]
  [ ] [Skill or behavior]

ANTI-SIGNALS (not disqualifying alone, but raise concern):
  - [Pattern] - because [reason this predicts poor fit]
  - [Pattern] - because [reason this predicts poor fit]

SELLING POINTS FOR THIS CANDIDATE PROFILE:
  - [What to emphasize to convert this type of candidate]

Calibration meeting agenda (30 min):

  1. Hiring manager walks through the must-haves and anti-signals (10 min)
  2. Each interviewer states their assigned competencies and 2-3 key questions (15 min)
  3. Agree on the debrief format and scoring scale (5 min)

Create an interview loop

Loop structure by role type:

Engineering (IC):
  Stage 1 - Recruiter screen (30 min): motivation, logistics, high-level experience
  Stage 2 - Hiring manager screen (45 min): role fit, past projects, team dynamics
  Stage 3 - Technical assessment: take-home OR live coding (45-60 min)
  Stage 4 - Onsite loop (3-4 hours total):
    - Systems design / architecture (60 min)
    - Depth interview: past technical work (45 min)
    - Cross-functional collaboration (45 min)
    - Bar raiser / values interview (45 min)

Product Manager:
  Stage 1 - Recruiter screen (30 min)
  Stage 2 - Hiring manager screen (45 min)
  Stage 3 - Product exercise: written or live case study
  Stage 4 - Onsite loop:
    - Product sense and strategy (60 min)
    - Execution and metrics (45 min)
    - Leadership and influence (45 min)
    - Engineering / design partner interview (45 min)

Interviewer assignment rules:

  • No interviewer does two back-to-back interviews with the same candidate (fatigue bias)
  • At least one interviewer should be from a different team (bar raiser function)
  • All interviewers receive the resume and scorecard 24 hours before the loop
  • Debrief must happen within 24 hours; score independently before discussing

Manage the offer process

Offer timeline:

Day 0:  Final debrief complete. Hiring decision made.
Day 1:  Verbal offer extended by hiring manager (not recruiter - signals importance).
        Cover: base, equity, bonus, start date, and one to two personalized selling points.
Day 1-2: Written offer letter sent within 24 hours of verbal acceptance.
Day 3-7: Candidate decision window. Check in once at midpoint.
Day 7+:  If no decision, ask directly: "Is there anything preventing you from deciding?"

Comp structure to communicate:

Base salary:      $[range]. Explain where they land in band and why.
Equity:           [shares or %]. Explain vesting schedule, cliff, and current valuation context.
Bonus:            [target %]. Explain how it is calculated and historical payout.
Benefits:         Health, dental, vision, 401k match, PTO policy. List specifics, not "competitive".
Start date:       Propose a date; leave room to negotiate.
Offer expiration: 5-7 business days. Shorter creates pressure; longer delays close.

Closing tactics for reluctant candidates:

  1. Identify the real hesitation - ask directly, do not assume it is compensation
  2. Arrange a call with the hiring manager or a peer they connected with in the loop
  3. Share a specific example of growth or impact from a current team member
  4. If competing offer exists: do not get into a bidding war on unknown numbers; ask to see the competing offer before matching or beating it
  5. Know your walk-away: if the candidate needs more than a 10-15% comp adjustment to accept, re-examine whether they are the right hire

Track recruiting metrics

Core funnel metrics:

MetricFormulaHealthy benchmark
Time-to-fillOffer acceptance date - req open date< 45 days (IC), < 90 days (exec)
Time-to-hireOffer acceptance date - first application< 30 days
Offer acceptance rateOffers accepted / offers extended> 80%
Pipeline conversion rateStage N+1 / Stage NVaries by stage (see below)
Source-to-hireHires by source / total hiresTrack to optimize channel spend
Interview-to-offer ratioOnsites completed / offers extended< 3:1
Quality of hirePerformance score at 6 monthsManager-defined; track cohort

Stage conversion benchmarks (engineering roles):

Sourced / Applied  ->  Screened:           20-30%
Screened           ->  Phone screen:       30-50%
Phone screen       ->  Onsite:             30-50%
Onsite             ->  Offer:              25-40%
Offer              ->  Accepted:           > 80%

Dashboard checklist:

  • Reqs open by team and age
  • Active candidates per stage per req
  • Week-over-week pipeline change (growing / shrinking / stalled)
  • Source breakdown for current quarter
  • Time-in-stage heatmap (where candidates get stuck)

Build employer brand

Core assets:

Careers page:
  - Team photos and short videos (authentic, not over-produced)
  - Engineering blog or Notion page with technical writing
  - "A day in the life" content for key roles
  - Explicit statement on remote/hybrid/in-office
  - Transparent salary bands (or at minimum, a public pay philosophy)

Glassdoor / Blind:
  - Respond to all reviews - positive and negative - within 2 weeks
  - Do not argue with negative reviews; acknowledge and explain what changed
  - Encourage current employees to leave honest reviews (never fake or coerced)

Conference and community presence:
  - Engineers speaking at relevant conferences signals technical credibility
  - Sponsoring niche communities (Discord, Slack groups) drives passive awareness
  - Open source contributions show culture and work quality

Content cadence:

ChannelFrequencyContent type
LinkedIn company page2-3x/weekHiring announcements, team wins, culture moments
Engineering blog1-2x/monthTechnical deep-dives, architecture decisions, post-mortems
Twitter/X3-5x/weekQuick takes, behind-the-scenes, team shoutouts
Glassdoor responseWithin 2 weeksResponse to each new review

Anti-patterns / common mistakes

MistakeWhy it is wrongWhat to do instead
Writing job descriptions as a wish listA 15-bullet must-haves list discourages strong candidates (especially women) and fills the funnel with poor fitsLimit must-haves to 3-5 directly job-relevant criteria; move everything else to nice-to-haves
Unstructured interviews ("tell me about yourself")Measures charisma and communication style, not job-relevant competencies; introduces significant biasDefine competencies, assign them to interviewers, and use behavioral questions with a scoring rubric
Ghosting rejected candidatesDamages employer brand; candidates remember and share bad experiences publiclySend rejections within 5 business days of a decision; personalize the message for candidates who reached onsite
Slow offer process (> 5 days from decision to verbal offer)Top candidates accept competing offers; every day of delay is lost pipelinePre-align on comp band and approval chain before the loop; make the verbal offer within 24 hours of the debrief
Single-channel sourcing (only LinkedIn or only referrals)Homogenizes the candidate pool; creates blind spots in diversity and skill coverageActivate at least three channels per req; review source diversity quarterly
Collecting interview feedback verbally onlyAnchoring bias: the loudest voice in the debrief shapes everyone else's recallRequire written scorecards submitted before the debrief meeting begins

References

For detailed templates and examples, load the relevant file from references/:

  • references/job-description-templates.md - full job description templates for engineering, product, and marketing roles with inline guidance
  • references/interview-scorecard.md - scorecard templates for IC, manager, and leadership interviews with behavioral anchors
  • references/offer-letter-template.md - offer letter template with compensation breakdown, equity explanation, and closing email scripts

Only load a references file when the current task requires it.


Related skills

When this skill is activated, check if the following companion skills are installed. For any that are missing, mention them to the user and offer to install before proceeding with the task. Example: "I notice you don't have [skill] installed yet - it pairs well with this skill. Want me to install it?"

  • interview-design - Designing structured interviews, creating rubrics, building coding challenges, or assessing culture fit.
  • onboarding - Designing onboarding programs, creating 30/60/90 plans, setting up buddy systems, or measuring ramp effectiveness.
  • employment-law - Drafting offer letters, handling terminations, classifying workers, or creating workplace policies.
  • technical-interviewing - Designing coding challenges, structuring system design interviews, building interview...

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