Quality of hire has become one of the most critical and misunderstood talent acquisition metrics. As organizations demand proof of hiring impact, leaders need a clear, practical way to connect recruiting outcomes with real business performance.
Shiran Danoch, CEO and founder of Informed Decisions, an interview intelligence platform based in Tel Aviv, will share a structured framework for measuring quality of hire on April 21 at SHRM Talent 2026. The session is open to both registered in-person attendees in Dallas and to registered remote attendees.
Danoch briefly discussed her upcoming session with SHRM.
SHRM: Quality of hire is often discussed but rarely defined consistently — what does an effective, business-aligned definition of quality of hire look like in practice?
Danoch: Consistency and business alignment are key issues when it comes to quality of hire. The misalignment often starts at the very beginning of the hiring process, when we’re defining the job profile and description. Many times, we jump straight to assessment without first aligning all stakeholders on what “good” looks like. That’s why the specific definition of quality of hire is less important than ensuring it’s agreed upon and aligned across all stakeholders. Otherwise, when talent acquisition or the business says, “we succeeded” or “we need to improve,” arguments ensue because we lack shared understanding of what success actually means.
But here’s a clear definition: The immediate and long-term value a new hire delivers to the organization — measured through high job performance and sustained tenure.
In practice, an effective definition must include measurable components tied to business outcomes. This means incorporating metrics like performance ratings at six and 12 months, time-to-productivity, retention rates, and manager satisfaction scores. The critical element is customizing these metrics based on your organization’s strategic priorities. For a sales role, quality might emphasize quota attainment; for a technical role, it might focus on project delivery and innovation.
The real power comes from getting hiring managers, talent acquisition, and leadership to agree on these metrics before the first candidate interview, turning quality of hire from a post-mortem debate into a proactive strategic alignment tool.
SHRM: How can organizations use interview data, performance outcomes, and employee feedback to create a continuous feedback loop that measurably improves hiring decisions over time?
Danoch: Tying interview process scores with on-the-job performance outcomes is an underutilized goldmine for most organizations. It unlocks a wealth of insights that allow companies to essentially reverse-engineer their hiring process, understanding what’s working, what’s not, and which components actually predict job success versus those that might be hindering performance.
At Informed Decisions, our interview intelligence platform was built specifically to enable this continuous feedback loop. It helps organizations quantify each step of the interview process and then monitors the performance and retention of those hired. The platform continuously analyzes results and builds predictive models that assign more weight to the skills with higher correlations to job performance.
The insights our clients gain from this approach are consistently eye-opening:
- Which skills actually predict performance during the hiring process.
- Which interviewers excel at identifying top performers and which consistently miss the mark, plus the distinct interview practices of each group.
- Which interview rounds are redundant and don’t add value to hiring decision accuracy.
- Whether different skills predict performance versus tenure.
And these are just a few examples. Imagine having all of this data available in your hiring process and never examining it. It’s like driving blindfolded. This continuous feedback loop transforms hiring from guesswork into a data-informed science, where each hiring cycle makes your process measurably smarter and more effective.
SHRM: What will attendees take away from your session?
Danoch: Attendees will leave with a practical, step-by-step framework for measuring and improving quality of hire in their organizations. Specifically, they’ll gain:
- A clear definition of quality of hire, moving beyond vague metrics like time-to-hire to focus on performance, retention, and post-hire feedback that actually predict success.
- A shared accountability model that clarifies the distinct roles of talent acquisition and business leaders in owning, measuring, and improving quality of hire.
- A maturity assessment framework to evaluate where their organization currently stands and identify concrete next steps for building stronger, evidence-based hiring practices.
- Real examples of how progressive organizations use data from interviews, performance evaluations, and surveys to create a continuous feedback loop that improves hiring accuracy over time.
Attendees will walk away knowing exactly how to connect their recruiting outcomes with business performance and tell a compelling, data-driven story about hiring impact.
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