HR AI Skill

Reference Checks

Conduct reference checks for final-stage candidates. Use when verifying employment history, assessing past performance, evaluating cultural fit through former managers and colleagues, or compiling reference summary reports. Handles reference contact collect...

Reference Checks

Verify candidate credentials and assess fit through structured reference conversations.

Workflow

  1. Collect 3–5 reference contacts from the candidate (minimum: 2 former managers, 1 peer).
  2. Verify references are legitimate: cross-check company email domains, LinkedIn profiles, employment dates.
  3. Send introductory email to each reference explaining the process, estimated time (15 min), and confidentiality assurance.
  4. Conduct structured reference interviews using the question framework below.
  5. Record responses systematically; flag inconsistencies with candidate's claims.
  6. Analyze responses for patterns across references.
  7. Generate a reference summary report for the hiring team.
  8. Flag any concerns for hiring manager review before offer decision.

Reference Collection

Ask the candidate for:

For each reference, collect:
  - Full name
  - Relationship to candidate (manager, peer, direct report)
  - Company and timeframe of working together
  - Email address (prefer company email over personal)
  - Phone number (for phone-based checks)
  - Permission confirmed: Yes/No

Minimum requirements:
  - 2 former supervisors/managers
  - 1 peer or teammate
  - 1 direct report (if candidate was in a management role)

Rule: Never accept "current manager" as a reference without candidate's explicit permission — could jeopardize their current position. Accept "HR-only" references and note the limitation.

Verification Checks

Before contacting references:

| Check | Method | Red Flag | |-------|--------|----------| | Employment dates match? | Cross-reference with resume + LinkedIn | Gap > 3 months unexplained | | Job title matches? | LinkedIn, company directory | Title inflation (> 1 level) | | Company still exists? | Quick web search | Defunct company, fake employer | | Reference actually worked together? | Ask reference directly | "I don't know this person" | | Email domain valid? | Check domain matches company | Generic Gmail/Yahoo for corporate role |

Structured Reference Questions

For Former Managers (ask all)

1. Confirmation:
   "Can you confirm [Candidate] worked at [Company] from [date] to [date]
    in the role of [Title]?"

2. Core responsibilities:
   "What were [Candidate]'s primary responsibilities?"
   → Validate against resume claims

3. Key strengths:
   "What are [Candidate]'s top 2–3 strengths?"
   → Look for alignment with role requirements

4. Areas for improvement:
   "What areas was [Candidate] working to improve?"
   → Gauge self-awareness and growth trajectory

5. Work style:
   "How would you describe [Candidate]'s work style and approach?"
   → Look for collaboration, initiative, communication

6. Handling challenges:
   "Can you share an example of how [Candidate] handled a difficult situation?"
   → Assess resilience and problem-solving

7. Team dynamics:
   "How did [Candidate] work with others on the team?"
   → Cultural fit signal

8. Reason for leaving:
   "Why did [Candidate] leave [Company]?"
   → Cross-check against candidate's stated reason

9. Rehire question (critical):
   "Would you rehire [Candidate] if the opportunity arose?"
   → "Yes" = green light; "No" = immediate red flag; "Maybe" = probe further

10. Overall assessment:
    "On a scale of 1–10, how would you rate [Candidate] overall?"
    → 8+ = strong, 6–7 = acceptable, < 6 = concern

For Peers (ask top 3)

1. "What did you enjoy most about working with [Candidate]?"
2. "Can you describe a project you worked on together?"
3. "How does [Candidate] handle disagreement or conflict?"

For Direct Reports (if candidate was a manager)

1. "How would you describe [Candidate]'s management style?"
2. "Did [Candidate] provide regular feedback and development support?"
3. "How did [Candidate] handle underperformance on the team?"
4. "Would you want to work for [Candidate] again?"

Response Analysis Framework

Green Signals (reinforce positive candidate assessment)

Yellow Signals (note and discuss with hiring manager)

Red Signals (escalate immediately)

Reference Summary Report

REFERENCE CHECK SUMMARY
=======================
Candidate: [Name]
Role: [Title]
Date: [Date]
Checked by: [Recruiter/HR Name]

REFERENCES CONTACTED: 3/3
  1. [Name], Former Manager at [Company] — Phone (15 min)
  2. [Name], Peer at [Company] — Email survey
  3. [Name], Former Manager at [Company] — Phone (12 min)

EMPLOYMENT VERIFICATION:
  Company A (2020–2023): ✓ Confirmed
  Company B (2017–2020): ✓ Confirmed (title slightly different: "Sr. Engineer" not "Lead")

KEY THEMES:
  Strengths: Strong technical problem-solver, reliable under pressure, collaborative
  Growth areas: Could be more proactive in sharing ideas in meetings (mentioned by 2/3 refs)

REHIRE RESPONSE:
  Ref 1: Yes, immediately
  Ref 2: Yes
  Ref 3: Yes, would welcome them back

OVERALL ASSESSMENT:
  Average rating: 8.3/10
  Signal: GREEN — References strongly support candidacy
  Recommendation: Proceed to offer

CONCERNS: None identified

Phone vs. Email Reference Checks

| Method | Pros | Cons | When to Use | |--------|------|------|-------------| | Phone | Richer data, read tone, probe deeper | Time-intensive, requires scheduling | Final-round candidates, leadership roles | | Email survey | Scalable, documented, async | Lower response rate, less depth | High-volume hiring, early-stage checks | | Hybrid | Balance of depth and efficiency | More complex to manage | Default approach: phone for managers, email for peers |

Legal Compliance

Edge Cases