One interview that stands out in my memory was a group interview at Victoria’s Secret, and reflecting on it through this week’s readings, I now understand why it felt ineffective. The role was primarily individual and customer‑focused, yet the group format pushed candidates to compete for attention rather than demonstrate job‑related skills. This lowered the interview’s validity, because the format didn’t measure the competencies actually required for retail sales. It also reduced reliability, since each candidate received different follow‑up questions and unequal speaking time. As someone going for the job, it almost felt like a competition against the other candidates instead of a meeting to provide my professionalism & experience.
Rebecca Knight’s article highlights exactly this issue. She explains that unstructured or inconsistent interviews are “often unreliable for predicting job success,” and that structured interviews help employers “focus on the factors that have a direct impact on performance.” My Victoria’s Secret interview lacked this structure, making it feel more like a personality contest than a fair assessment.
Buckingham and Coffman reinforce this point in First, Break All the Rules. They argue that great managers rely on consistent, talent focused measures, not gut feelings or casual conversations. Their research shows that effective selection requires identifying recurring patterns of behavior, not who happens to speak the loudest in a group setting. This aligns with the idea that interviews should be standardized and tied directly to job performance indicators. From a utility standpoint, the group interview didn’t generate meaningful information for the time invested.
Giving advice to a hiring team, I’d keep it simple such as using structured one on one interviews so everyone gets the same fair shot, add a few scenario or work sample questions to actually see how someone would handle the job, and make sure interviewers get basic training on unconscious bias since awareness really is the first step to unraveling it. Overall, after experience in multiple different interview styles, it’s pretty easy to see why some interviews feel fair and useful while others fall short.
Works Cited
Buckingham, Marcus, and Curt Coffman. First, Break All the Rules: What the World’s Greatest Managers Do Differently. Gallup Press, 2016.
Knight, Rebecca. “7 Practical Ways to Reduce Bias in Your Hiring Process.” Harvard Business Review, 12 June 2017.
