Interview Scorecard Guide
1. Overview
What is a Scorecard?
A scorecard is a structured evaluation tool used to assess candidates consistently and objectively against predefined competencies. It ensures all interviewers apply the same criteria, enabling fair, data-driven hiring decisions.
Why Use a Scorecard?
In the absence of a standardised framework, candidate evaluations can be inconsistent and prone to bias. A scorecard introduces rigor, transparency, and alignment across the hiring process.
Key Benefits
- Consistency: Standardised evaluation across all candidates
- Objectivity: Reduces reliance on subjective judgment
- Comparability: Enables side-by-side candidate assessment
- Accountability: Creates a clear audit trail for decisions
- Efficiency: Streamlines decision-making
Who is this for?
- Hiring Managers
- Interview Panel Members
- HR / Talent Acquisition Teams
- Business Leaders involved in hiring
2. How to Use the Scorecard
- Configure competencies in the ‘Setup’ sheet. All candidate sheets are automatically updated.
- Each candidate has a dedicated sheet (Candidate_01, Candidate_02, etc.). Input scores only—calculations are automated.
- To add additional candidates: duplicate the ‘Template’ sheet → rename accordingly (e.g., Candidate_06). Pre-built formulas support up to Candidate_20.
- Knockout Logic: Any Must-Have competency scored as 1 (Unsatisfactory) automatically results in a “Do Not Proceed” status.
- Weighting: Competency weights are relative and do not need to total 100. The ‘Share %’ column reflects proportional weighting.
3. Scoring Methodology
Candidates are evaluated using a standardised rating scale, based on observable behaviours and evidence demonstrated during the interview.
Rating Scale
|
Rating |
Classification |
Description & Behavioural Indicators |
|---|---|---|
|
5 |
Exceptional |
Consistently exceeds expectations. Demonstrates mastery. Acts as a role model. Strong hire (top 10%). |
|
4 |
Strong |
Exceeds expectations in most areas. Clear strengths demonstrated. Recommended hire (top 25%). |
|
3 |
Competent |
Meets expectations. Adequate competency. Borderline—may require further discussion. |
|
2 |
Developing |
Below expectations. Noticeable gaps in competency. Not recommended for hire. |
|
1 |
Unsatisfactory |
Significantly below expectations. Major concerns. Triggers knockout if Must-Have. |
|
0 |
Not Yet Scored |
Default before evaluation. Results in “Incomplete” if applied to Must-Have competencies. |
4. Scoring Principles
- Evaluate candidates against role requirements, not against each other
- Base ratings on demonstrated evidence, not assumptions or potential
- Provide clear, behaviour-based comments to support scores
- Focus on observable competencies to minimise bias
5. Knockout Criteria
- Competencies marked as Must-Have are critical for success
- A score of 1 (Unsatisfactory) in any Must-Have competency automatically results in disqualification (Do Not Proceed)
6. Evaluation Best Practices
To ensure consistency and fairness:
- Use structured, evidence-based assessments
- Document specific examples from the interview
- Avoid unconscious bias by focusing on facts
- Participate in calibration discussions post-interview
- Ensure ratings reflect current capability, not future potential
- Assign “Must-Have” status only where failure should disqualify the candidate
7. Outcome Interpretation
- Proceed: Candidate meets or exceeds expectations across key competencies
- Hold: Mixed performance; requires further evaluation or panel alignment
- Do Not Proceed: Does not meet critical requirements or triggers knockout criteria
8. Additional Guidance
- Keep inputs simple and consistent—the model handles calculations
- Avoid over-scoring; use the full rating scale appropriately
- Ensure all Must-Have competencies are scored before final decisions
- Maintain version control to ensure alignment across users
