Interview Process Framework (IPF)

1. Purpose

The purpose of the Interview Process Framework (IPF) is to establish a structured, transparent, and role-appropriate sequence of interviews that ensures every candidate is assessed consistently and fairly across technical, managerial, and cultural dimensions.

This ensures:

  • Every candidate follows a defined evaluation flow, reducing ad-hoc or biased interview practices.
  • Departments focus on technical/functional depth, while HR ensures fairness, compliance, and EVP alignment.
  • Interview rounds are proportionate to the role level (intern, associate, senior, leadership).
  • Candidate experience remains positive, reflecting professionalism and organizational values.

Outcome Expected:

  • A standardized interview flow is followed for all hires.
  • Departments and HR clearly know their responsibilities in each stage.
  • Candidates are evaluated comprehensively but efficiently, minimizing unnecessary delays or redundancies.

2. Scope

This framework applies to all recruitment processes for full-time, part-time, contractual, and internship roles across the organization.

It covers:

  1. Interview Stages
    • Defining the minimum and maximum interview rounds per role type.
    • Standard structure: Screening → Technical/Functional → Managerial/Behavioral → HR/Final.
    • Differentiation for entry-level, mid-level, and leadership roles.
  2. Ownership of Stages
    • HR/TA owns screening and compliance-driven steps.
    • Departments own technical/functional evaluation stages.
    • Hiring Managers own managerial/behavioral rounds.
    • HR owns final cultural/EVP alignment and offer readiness.
  3. Candidate Experience
    • Ensuring fairness, transparency, and structured communication across stages.
    • Standard interview duration and timelines per stage.
    • Clear closure process (either selection, rejection, or pipeline holding).
  4. Integration with Other SOPs
    • Panels must be set up as per the Interview Panel Setup SOP.
    • Evaluations must follow the Interview Rubric Ownership SOP.
    • Feedback must be stored as per the Interview Feedback & Storage SOP.

Exclusions:

  • Informal coffee chats, culture-fit discussions outside the structured process.
  • Client-led interviews where clients design their own process.

3. Roles & Responsibilities

RoleResponsibilities in Interview Process Framework
Talent Acquisition (TA) / HR– Conducts initial screening round (resume fit, communication, basic role alignment).- Ensures all interview stages follow the approved IPF.- Coordinates scheduling and candidate communication.- Manages feedback collection and storage in HRIS/ATS.- Conducts final HR round for EVP alignment, cultural fit, and compensation discussion.
Hiring Manager / Department Head– Defines role-specific interview flow (e.g., number of technical rounds).- Provides input on technical and behavioral competencies to be tested.- Owns managerial/behavioral round to assess stakeholder management, decision-making, and team fit.- Ensures alignment with role outcomes defined in JD.
Department Interviewers / SMEs– Conduct technical/functional interviews (Backend, Frontend, QA, Design, PM, etc.).- Use role-path rubrics consistently (per Interview Rubric Ownership SOP).- Provide structured rubric-based feedback within required timelines.- Flag any gaps in the rubric or process for future improvements.
Interview Panel Coordinator (if assigned)– Ensures panels are balanced and interviews run as per schedule.- Acts as point-of-contact between HR and panel members.- Monitors feedback submission discipline.
CHRO / Leadership– Approves the final IPF for each role category.- Reviews process exceptions (e.g., skipping or adding rounds).- Owns escalations regarding candidate experience or process deviations.
Candidate– Actively participates in each stage as scheduled.- Provides required documentation on time (portfolio, assignments, references).- Maintains professional engagement with the process.

4. Standard Interview Flow

The Interview Process Framework (IPF) defines a structured stage-wise flow that adapts to role seniority while ensuring consistency across all hires.

4.1 Standard Stages

StagePurposeOwnerNotes
1. Screening (HR/TA)Validate resume fit, basic communication, role interest, and alignment with JD.TA/HRShort call (20–30 min). Mandatory for all candidates.
2. Technical/Functional Round(s)Assess core role-specific skills (e.g., coding for Backend, portfolio for Design, testing approach for QA, Agile for PM).Department SMEs1–2 rounds for entry/mid-level, 2–3 rounds for senior/critical roles. Uses role-path rubrics.
3. Managerial/Behavioral RoundAssess decision-making, leadership potential, problem-solving, and cultural/team fit.Hiring Manager / Department HeadAlways structured using rubric with EVP alignment (Growth, Impact, Culture, Rewards, Balance).
4. HR / Final RoundValidate cultural fit, EVP alignment, career expectations, and compensation discussions.HRConfirms candidate readiness for offer stage. May be merged with Stage 3 for junior roles.

4.2 Role-Level Differentiation

Role LevelTypical RoundsNotes
Intern / TraineeScreening → 1 Technical → HRSimplified flow; focus on learning aptitude and cultural fit.
Associate / Entry-LevelScreening → 1–2 Technical → HRCovers basic technical competency + EVP alignment.
Mid-Level (2–6 yrs)Screening → 2 Technical → Managerial → HRBalanced technical and behavioral evaluation.
Senior / LeadScreening → 2–3 Technical → Managerial → HR/LeadershipExpanded scope: leadership skills, stakeholder management.
Leadership / Strategic RolesScreening → Multiple Technical/Functional (if applicable) → Managerial/Leadership Panel → HR/CHROCustomized; includes strategic and cultural interviews.

4.3 Process Principles

  • Consistency: All candidates for a role follow the same flow.
  • Efficiency: No unnecessary duplication of evaluation.
  • Flexibility: Departments may add rounds only with HR + CHRO approval.
  • Closure Discipline: Each candidate must receive timely closure (selection, rejection, or talent pool).

5. Feedback & Evaluation Integration

The Interview Process Framework (IPF) is only effective if feedback from each stage is captured in a structured, rubric-driven manner and integrated into hiring decisions.

5.1 Feedback Submission

  • Every interviewer must complete the Interview Feedback Form (Stage 3 Template) immediately after their round.
  • Feedback must include:
    • Numeric rating (as per rubric scale).
    • Qualitative notes (strengths, gaps, concerns).
    • Final recommendation (Hire / No Hire / Keep in Pool).
  • Delayed or missing feedback is escalated to the Hiring Manager and HR.

5.2 Rubric Alignment

  • All evaluations must follow approved role-path rubrics (per Interview Rubric Ownership SOP).
  • HR ensures that behavioral and cultural EVP criteria are covered in every process, regardless of role.
  • Department SMEs ensure technical accuracy and depth in their rubric areas.

5.3 ATS/HRIS Integration

  • Feedback must be stored digitally in the HRIS/ATS, linked to the candidate profile.
  • Only authorized stakeholders (HR, Hiring Manager, Department Head, CHRO) may access full evaluation records.
  • Audit trails are maintained for compliance and fairness reviews.

5.4 Decision-Making Integration

  • Hiring decisions are made only after all required rubric-based feedback is submitted.
  • HR consolidates feedback and prepares a Candidate Evaluation Summary for final discussion with Hiring Manager and Department Head.
  • The CHRO/Leadership is involved in cases of critical hires, tie-breaker decisions, or escalations.

6. Compliance & Governance

The Interview Process Framework (IPF) must adhere to legal, ethical, and organizational governance standards to ensure fairness and reduce hiring risks.

6.1 Legal & Regulatory Compliance

  • All interview stages must comply with local labor laws and equal opportunity regulations.
  • Questions or assessments must not directly or indirectly evaluate protected characteristics (e.g., gender, age, marital status, religion, disability).
  • Candidate data, including feedback forms and rubrics, must follow GDPR and applicable data privacy standards.

6.2 Internal Governance

  • HR governs the framework, ensuring structure, fairness, and compliance.
  • Departments govern technical evaluation accuracy and role-path rubric maintenance.
  • Hiring Managers ensure interviewers are briefed and use standardized rubrics.
  • CHRO/Leadership reviews deviations, escalations, and ensures alignment with EVP pillars (Growth, Impact, Culture, Rewards, Balance).

6.3 Ethical Standards

  • All candidates must follow the same interview flow for a given role type; exceptions require documented approval.
  • Interviewers must avoid subjective evaluation (“gut feel”) without rubric-backed evidence.
  • Cultural and behavioral assessments must be framed positively and inclusively, not as exclusionary filters.

6.4 Monitoring & Accountability

  • HR conducts quarterly audits on interview flow adherence (e.g., ensuring no skipped stages, feedback submitted on time).
  • Non-compliance or misuse of the process is flagged in the HR Compliance Dashboard.
  • Department Heads are accountable for ensuring timely rubric updates; HR is accountable for fairness audits.

7. Review & Updates

The Interview Process Framework (IPF) must be regularly reviewed to ensure it remains current, compliant, and effective in supporting organizational hiring needs.

7.1 Review Frequency

  • Annual Review: Conducted once every year by HR in collaboration with Department Heads.
  • Interim Reviews: Triggered when there are significant changes, such as:
    • Introduction of new departments, technologies, or role types.
    • Feedback from hiring managers or candidates indicates process inefficiencies.
    • Compliance or legal requirement updates.

7.2 Ownership of Review

  • HR (Talent Acquisition): Owns framework updates, ensuring fairness, consistency, and integration with EVP.
  • Departments: Validate that technical evaluation flows remain relevant to evolving role needs.
  • CHRO/Leadership: Approves changes, especially those impacting senior/critical roles or cross-departmental processes.

7.3 Update Process

  • Proposed updates must be documented and circulated to stakeholders for review.
  • Changes go through Internal Review → Leadership Approval → Rollout & Communication.
  • Updated versions must carry the version number, date, and approver details in the MIC Documentation Library.

7.4 Communication of Updates

  • HR communicates updates to all interviewers and hiring managers before the next recruitment cycle.
  • Refresher training sessions are conducted for interviewers if major changes are introduced.
  • An update log is maintained in MIC for audit and transparency.