Leadership

This CEO meets every interviewee and these are his top hiring tips

A worker arrives at his office in the Canary Wharf business district in London February 26, 2014. London's financial services sector created 25 percent more jobs in February than a year ago, new data has shown, indicating the industry may be recovering from the restructuring and redundancies prompted by the financial crisis. After a strong January, the City hiring market showed no signs of slowing down last month, with 3,220 new jobs created, compared with 2,575 added in February 2013, according to financial services recruiter Astbury Marsden. The data suggests London's banks and financial services companies are returning to growth after slashing thousands of jobs in the face of a lengthy recession and a series of industry scandals that followed the financial crisis. Picture taken February 26, 2014. REUTERS/Eddie Keogh (BRITAIN - Tags: BUSINESS EMPLOYMENT TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY)ATTENTION EDITORS: PICTURE 03 OF 25 FOR PACKAGE 'CITY OF LONDON - LIFE IN THE SQUARE MILE'. TO FIND ALL IMAGES SEARCH 'RECRUITER KEOGH' - RTR3FZ88

"The best hiring advice that I've ever got is: 'When in doubt, don't hire.'" Image: REUTERS/Eddie Keogh

Aine Cain
Careers Reporter, Business Insider
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There's no room for doubt in the hiring process.

That's a mantra that Luis von Ahn, CEO and founder of language learning app Duolingo, lives by.

He meets with every single person interviewing at his company, which currently employs about 70 people.

"The best hiring advice that I've ever got is: 'When in doubt, don't hire,'" he tells Business Insider.

"It is very common that we're in doubt," von Ahn says, which accounts for why the Duolingo team remains so lean.

Von Ahn says that the value of the advice becomes even clearer whenever it's not heeded.

"Every now and then we don't follow that because we think we really need this position filled," he says. "We've been looking for this particular position for months. With this person, we know they have some bad things about them, but we need this position filled. Every time we have succumbed to that it has been a mistake."

Hiring a bad fit is almost always a costly and time-consuming error for any company. A study from the Society for Human Resource Management found that 41% of hiring managers estimate that hiring the wrong person costs the company thousands for dollars, as Business Insider previously reported.

"You spend all this effort onboarding them, and then a few months later things don't work out," von Ahn says. "And things usually don't work out because of the thing that you knew about. You knew what the problem was going to be. You knew that maybe they were going to be a little slow, and it turns out they're really slow. Or maybe they're not going to be very nice. Turns out, they're really not nice."

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