Stack Is Not Proof of Competence

Tommy Sauermann — Talentpark
Tommy Sauermann
13 February 2024
SHARE THIS ARTICLE
Abstract signal network made of fine technical nodes

A known stack does not prove that someone has solved a relevant problem. In recruiting, that often sounds counterintuitive, because visible movement is easier to defend than a narrower decision. But that is exactly where the difference between busyness and progress begins: a team can be highly active and still not move closer to the right person.

Between late 2023 and spring 2024, the counter-movement became visible: fewer open roles, more selection pressure, more skepticism toward simple tool promises. In that situation, Tech & Digital Recruiting stops being an abstract topic and becomes a practical question: which information actually helps refine a selection, and which information only creates another detour?

The typical mistake is simple: tech recruiting quickly tips into keyword search and misses real competence. Profiles are discussed before the search space is understood. Exceptions are confused with potential, known companies with fit, and fast feedback with quality. The louder the process gets, the harder it becomes to sort out a weak signal in time.

The better approach is narrower and more demanding. Stack is a clue, but never the whole assessment. That does not require a large framework, but discipline at the decision points: which assumption are we testing, what evidence would disprove it, and what next action follows from that? Recruiting becomes less reactive and much easier to steer.

Talentpark maps tech profiles through context, role, and impact instead of through terms alone.

Next stepNext step

From insight to a clear hiring move.

You've read field notes on signal, process, and market context.In a short hiring check we map what matters for your role or team.

Clarity instead of more research.

Termin buchen