
Many Interview Intelligence platforms now brag about their โAI-powered, skills-based questions.โ
But hereโs the uncomfortable truth:
Most of those questions arenโt skills-based at all.
Why?
Because AI models are trained on whatโs most common, not whatโs most effective.
And in interviews, โcommonโ often means predictable, vague, and easy to fake (Garbage in, Garbage out).
๐ฃ๐ถ๐๐ณ๐ฎ๐น๐น #๐ญ: ๐๐ฎ๐๐ ๐๐ผ ๐ฐ๐ต๐ฒ๐ฎ๐, ๐๐ผ๐ฟ๐ป ๐ผ๐๐ ๐พ๐๐ฒ๐๐๐ถ๐ผ๐ป๐
Two vendors proudly promoting their AI question engines showcase these gems on their websites:
โข โWhatโs your experience working with a product team?โ
โข โHow does your previous experience align with the requirements of this role?โ
Letโs be honest, they arenโt skills-based.
Theyโre rรฉsumรฉ recaps.
They invite polished, rehearsed answers that reveal very little about what a candidate can actually do.
At Informed Decisions, we do it differently.
We focus on real, work-related scenarios, not generic templates.
Hereโs what weโd ask instead ๐
You're hiring a developer, and want to assess their ability to collaborate cross-functionally with Product.
๐งฉ โImagine you're mid-sprint and a product manager asks for a last-minute change to a feature spec. Engineering is already deep in implementation.
How would you approach the conversation?
What questions would you ask, what tradeoffs would you raise, and how would you get to a decision both teams can live with?โ
Thatโs how you assess cross-functional collaboration in a job-specific way and also create a realistic job preview.
This is just one of several pitfalls weโre seeing as AI-generated interviews go mainstream.