28 Top Hiring Questions Every Founder Asks Me
After scaling hiring for 1,716 businesses, I get asked the same questions over and over. Here are the top ones and my answers.
1. “How do I know who to hire next?”
Tank Answer:
Identify the constraint. What is slowing delivery, sales, or you down the most? Hire for the bottleneck. Use the Forecasting Framework: Scope of Constraint → Talent & Time → Money → Role Definition.
2. “How do I define a role clearly so an A-player can win?”
Tank Answer:
Define:
- Role Purpose
- 3 to 5 Success Criteria
- Responsibilities (core functions)
- Must-have skills, traits, and pace
Clarity is required from the hiring team before you start hiring.
3. “What’s the first step in hiring better people?”
Tank Answer:
Define the role, before you interview. A vague role attracts the wrong talent. Use qualification docs.
4. “How do I attract A-players without increasing salary?”
Tank Answer:
A-players buy into purpose, opportunity, standards, and outcomes. Create a compelling, clear, and quick hiring experience.
5. “How many interviews should we do?”
Tank Answer:
Three to four, each with a purpose.
- Screening
- Technical
- Culture
Final decision
Every interview answers a different question.
6. “How do I run a great technical interview?”
Tank Answer:
Test the actual work. No hypotheticals. Give them a real scenario or a real deliverable. Judge clarity, reasoning, pace, and standards. Assess their thought process, previous work, and decision making.
7. “Why do my hires keep failing?”
Tank Answer:
You may be hiring for tasks, not outcomes or ownership of areas. B-players (or worse 😅 ) do tasks. A-players own outcomes. Switch from duties → outcomes. Better talent. Better Outcomes.
8. “How long should hiring take?”
Tank Answer:
Depends on the role. A-player hiring averages 20 days for entry level; 30 days of leads, 45 for manager/director; and 60 to 90 for C-suite. (Note: We, at Tank, had all positions entry level to C-suite (blended) average of 29 days time to fill.
Speed matters, but clarity matters more. Move fast with structure.
9. “How do I avoid bad hires?”
Tank Answer:
Use a scorecard, structured interviews, knockout questions, and reference checks. Bad hires happen from unstructured evaluation, or not following a process.
10. “Should I hire cheap overseas talent or pay more for US talent?”
Tank Answer:
Hire for outcomes and communication. If clarity, communication, and pace are requirements, pay for it. If the role is repeatable and process-driven, overseas can be powerful. Find what works for you. (DM me: I know people who run businesses that find talent here.)
11. “What’s the difference between an A-player and a B-player?”
Tank Answer:
A-players create clarity, drive outcomes, and raise standards. B-players require clarity, wait for direction, and maintain standards.
12. “Should I hire full-time or contract?”
Tank Answer:
Hire full-time when you need ownership and long-term outcomes. Contract when you need a skill, not a role.
13. “What should success look like at 30/60/90 days?”
Tank Answer:
30 days: Understand and align
60 days: Produce and improve
90 days: Own and lead
If they don’t create clarity by day 30, they won’t create outcomes by day 90.
14. “How do I onboard someone the right way?”
Tank Answer:
Start with clarity → standards → pace → ownership. Use 10:80:10: check in at the start, let them run, then check the outcome.
15. “How do I retain A-players?”
Tank Answer:
Give them ownership, challenge, pace, and growth. A-players leave when capped, unclear, or surrounded by low standards.
16. “How do I fire someone the right way?”
Tank Answer:
When the role needs more than the person can give:
• Clarity
• Documentation
• Contingency plan
• Direct conversation
Slow firing is expensive. Fast firing is humane.
17. “Should I hire for potential or experience?”
Tank Answer:
Hire for slope (trajectory), not point-in-time ability. But don’t ignore must-have competency thresholds.
18. “How do I know if someone is actually an A-player?”
Tank Answer:
They show patterns of ownership, pace, clarity, and self-correction. They make the team better. They reduce managerial load, not increase it.
19. “How many candidates should I interview before choosing one?”
Tank Answer:
More than you think. 20–30 for key roles. Volume protects standards.
20. “What questions should I avoid in interviews?”
Tank Answer:
Hypotheticals (“What would you do?”)
Empty strengths/weakness prompts
“Tell me about yourself” without direction
Test reality, not imagination.
21. “What’s the best knockout question?”
Tank Answer:
“Tell me about a time you owned an outcome end-to-end.”
Listen for clarity, constraints, pace, and self-awareness.
22. “Should I use personality tests?”
Tank Answer:
Use them for self-awareness and coaching. Never for hiring decisions.
23. “How do I write a great job description?”
Tank Answer:
Write it like a sales page:
• What we need
• Why it matters
• What great looks like
• What they will own
Bad job descriptions create bad pipelines.
24. “Why does my pipeline suck?”
Tank Answer:
Your JD is vague, your ad is invisible, or your process is slow. Fix clarity → visibility → speed.
25. “What should I pay this role?”
Tank Answer:
Anchor compensation to outcomes, not tasks. Use market data as a reference, not a rule.
26. “Should my team help interview?”
Tank Answer:
Yes, but with structure. Give them specific questions and what “great” looks like. Otherwise, you get chaos.
27. “How do I close top candidates?”
Tank Answer:
Speed, clarity, and alignment. A clear offer call → a same-day written offer → clean next steps. A-players choose momentum.
28. “How do I know if I should work with Tank Recruiting?”
Tank Answer:
If you want clarity, structure, and a repeatable system—not guesswork. If you want to stop winging hiring and start winning hiring.
We have resources if you need them, reach out to Tank’s Team.