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FOUNDERS & CAPITAL ·

Structured Signals Beat Gut Reads — Even When the Hire Is an Agent

From the desk · why it matters

If you're delegating real work to AI agents, you need evaluation methods that actually predict performance, not just ones that feel rigorous. The same bias that makes human hiring unreliable makes ad-hoc agent testing unreliable too.

The Farnam Street essay on job interviews is a quiet demolition of professional intuition. The core argument is that unstructured conversations feel revealing precisely because humans are good at constructing coherent narratives from thin evidence. We come away from a thirty-minute chat convinced we know someone. We don't. What predicts actual job performance is structured assessment: standardized questions, work samples, and sober attention to base rates. Confidence in a candidate correlates poorly with competence in a role.

The translation is uncomfortable for anyone who has approved an agent workflow because a demo felt smooth. A fluent output in a controlled test is the agent equivalent of a candidate who interviews well — it activates the same false confidence. The real questions are structural: does the agent perform consistently across varied inputs, edge cases, and degraded conditions? What does the base rate of failure look like across a hundred runs, not three? Founders who build evaluation frameworks before they build trust into production will catch what a good demo hides.

Take this to your agent
  • Treat agent evaluation like structured hiring, not a vibe check
  • run enough volume to see base-rate failure before you trust a workflow with real stakes
  • the smoothness of a demo is a liability if you let it substitute for evidence.
Read original at Why Job Interviews Don’t Work

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