Proof-Based Hiring: The Framework for Hiring What You Can See

Why evidence of ability beats claims on paper — and how to implement it.

By Chris Fairley, Founder & CEO 7 min read

What Is Proof-Based Hiring?

Proof-based hiring is a recruitment approach where candidates demonstrate their abilities through tangible evidence — skill videos, work samples, or live demonstrations — rather than describing them on a résumé or in an interview.

The core principle: If you can see it, you can trust it.

This approach is the practical implementation of [skills-based hiring](/blog/skills-based-hiring), focused specifically on the evidence that proves someone can do the job.

Why Proof Matters More Than Claims

Traditional hiring relies on:

None of these show actual work. Proof-based hiring flips this by requiring candidates to show what they can do before you invest time in interviews.

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The Proof-Based Hiring Framework

Step 1: Define What Proof Looks Like

For each role, identify 2-3 demonstrations that would prove competence:

| Role | Proof Examples | |------|----------------| | Line Cook | Knife skills video, plating demonstration | | Barber | Fade technique video, client interaction | | Electrician | Safety check walkthrough, wiring explanation | | Server | Order-taking roleplay, menu knowledge demo |

Step 2: Create Simple Prompts

Make it easy for candidates to submit proof:

Step 3: Evaluate Before Interviewing

Review proof before scheduling calls. This saves hours and ensures you only interview candidates who can actually perform.

> Related: [Why Skill Videos Beat Phone Screens](/blog/why-skill-videos-beat-phone-screens)

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Proof-Based Hiring vs. Traditional Hiring

| Aspect | Traditional | Proof-Based | |--------|-------------|-------------| | Initial filter | Keywords on résumé | Visible skill demonstration | | Time investment | Hours of screening calls | Minutes watching demos | | Confidence level | Low (still guessing) | High (evidence seen) | | Candidate experience | Tedious applications | Show what you can do | | Bad hire risk | High | Significantly reduced |

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Common Types of Proof

1. Skill Videos (Most Accessible)

Candidates record themselves performing job tasks. Works for any hands-on role.

> Examples: [5 Skill Video Examples That Got Candidates Hired](/blog/skill-video-examples)

2. Work Samples

Past work, portfolios, or created samples. Common in creative and technical roles.

3. Live Demonstrations

In-person or video call demonstrations. Best for final-stage verification.

4. Verified Credentials

Where licenses matter, verify them — but separately from skill evaluation.

> Learn more: [What "Verified" Actually Means](/blog/what-verified-actually-means)

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FAQ: Proof-Based Hiring

Does proof-based hiring work for all roles?

It works best for roles where skill is the job — restaurants, trades, personal services, retail, logistics. For knowledge work, work samples and case studies serve as proof.

Won't candidates find this burdensome?

The opposite. A 30-second skill video is faster than filling out a lengthy application. Candidates appreciate the chance to show their abilities.

How do I avoid bias when reviewing proof?

Focus on the skill, not the person. Use consistent evaluation criteria. Assess ability before personality.

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Getting Started

The shift to proof-based hiring starts with one question: What would prove this candidate can do the job?

Answer that, create a simple prompt, and you've already improved your hiring process.

For roles in restaurants, trades, and services, [Vetano](/) makes proof-based hiring seamless — skill videos, ID verification, and organized profiles all in one place.

Ready to hire with proof? [See how it works →](/#how-it-works)