Improving Retention Through Skills-Aligned Reference Checks

Reference checks have always played a role in hiring, but their impact has often been limited by inconsistent processes, subjective feedback, and sparse information. In a world where hiring teams face more pressure than ever to make high-quality decisions quickly, reference checks need to offer more than basic employment verification or surface-level impressions. 

When your hiring decisions are grounded in objective, job-relevant skills, reference checks become a powerful validation step that confirms whether a candidate can demonstrate the capabilities required for success. 

And with modern digital tools like Harver’s Checkster, teams can collect richer, more reliable feedback at scale, all while staying compliant and reducing legal risk. 

Explore the basics of reference checks.   

Rethinking Reference Checks

Most reference checks rely on unstructured conversations and brief interactions. Questions like “What was it like to work with the candidate?” invite vague, inconsistent responses that aren’t tied to real job performance. Even when references want to be helpful, company “no reference” policies, legal concerns, or fear of liability can limit what they’re willing to share. 

As a result, hiring teams spend hours calling references and walk away with only a handful of data points, which don’t always predict on-the-job success. 

Skills-based hiring reframes reference checks entirely. Instead of asking broad questions about personality or general work style, reference checks become a structured verification of the skills and behaviors the role actually requires. 

Download our white paper to learn more about the science of skills-based hiring.  

How Skills-based Hiring Elevates Reference Checks

A skills-first process identifies the capabilities that matter most for each role—such as communication, collaboration, problem solving, or learning agility—through job analysis. Those skills then guide the entire hiring process, including how you evaluate reference feedback. 

When reference checks are aligned to a skills framework, organizations can: 

  • Validate the behaviors a candidate demonstrated in past roles 
  • Compare reference insights against role requirements and assessment results 
  • Reduce bias by focusing on observable, job-related behaviors 
  • Standardize questions across candidates for consistency and fairness 
  • Strengthen predictive accuracy and reduce turnover risk 

This approach transforms reference checks into a structured, evidence-driven decision point. 

Watch our webinar to discover the key components of a skills-first strategy and more.   

Better Questions, Better Insights

The most reliable reference feedback comes from asking consistent, skill-aligned questions. Checkster uses surveys validated by independent I/O psychologists to gather candid, job-relevant insights from more references in less time. 

Below are examples of modern, skills-focused questions you can incorporate: 

Collaboration and teamwork 

  • How did the candidate support and collaborate with coworkers? 
  • Can you share an example of how they contributed to team success? 

Communication 

  • How would you describe the candidate’s listening and communication skills? 
  • How effectively did they share information or delegate tasks? 

Adaptability and problem solving 

  • Tell me about a time the candidate had to adapt quickly to changing priorities. 
  • How did they approach unfamiliar tasks or new tools? 

Reliability and work habits 

  • Did the candidate consistently follow through on commitments? 
  • How did they handle stress, pressure, or conflicting deadlines? 

Leadership (if applicable) 

  • How would you describe the candidate’s management style? 
  • What leadership behaviors did they model for the team? 

These questions uncover concrete examples of past behavior, which are far better predictors of future performance than generic personality descriptions. 

Check out more sample reference check questions. 

The Legal and Compliance Landscape Matters

Even with a skills-based approach, legal considerations remain critical. Reference checks must avoid protected-class information and comply with state-specific regulations governing what employers can disclose. 

Key reminders: 

  • Never ask for information related to protected classes such as race, gender, age, disability, religion, marital status, or medical history. 
  • Always inquire about a reference’s company policy before asking questions. 
  • Collect enough references to buffer against potential bias or discriminatory feedback. 
  • Standardize questions to ensure compliance and consistency across candidates. 

A structured, skills-aligned reference process naturally reduces bias and legal risk because questions stay focused on job-related capabilities and observable behaviors, but it’s still important to keep all the nuances top of mind.  

Do a deeper dive on reference check compliance.  

Skill-first Reference Checks at Scale

Recruiters spend an average of 72 minutes per candidate when conducting phone-based reference checks and typically collect feedback from only two references. That means inconsistent insights, longer hiring cycles, and a higher likelihood of missing critical information. 

With Checksterteams spend just two minutes setting up a reference request and receive feedback from roughly six references in under 48 hours. Automated reminders, anonymous surveys, and built-in fraud detection increase response rates and surface more honest, candid feedback. 

By combining a skills-based hiring approach with technology that eliminates manual work, organizations can gather richer insights, reduce bias, and build a better hiring process—while staying compliant and improving efficiency. 

Take our evaluation to find out where you are on your skills-based hiring journey.

Picture of Khandice Long
Khandice Long

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