A shift in hiring approach
For years, experience has been one of the main criteria when evaluating candidates.
Years in a role, a specific sector, a linear career path.
But in today’s context, more and more companies are adopting a new approach:
Evaluating skills over traditional experience.
This does not mean that experience is no longer valued, but rather that it is not always the best predictor of future impact.
In many hiring processes, organizations are beginning to prioritize:
- real capabilities
- growth potential
- adaptability to the environment
And this is changing the way roles are defined, assessed, and decisions are made in recruitment processes.
Why companies are prioritizing skills
This shift is not random.
It reflects how the labor market and organizational needs are evolving.
More dynamic environments
Roles are evolving faster than ever.
Technologies, processes, and business models are constantly changing.
In this context, having experience in something specific does not always guarantee the ability to adapt to what comes next.
Companies need profiles with:
- learning agility
- flexibility
- critical thinking
Less linear career paths
It is increasingly common to find candidates with hybrid career paths.
Professionals who have worked across different sectors, functions, or types of organizations.
This makes evaluating only traditional experience limiting.
Skills provide a clearer understanding of the real value a person can bring.
Greater focus on potential
In many roles—especially in talent-scarce markets—potential is as relevant as prior experience.
Companies that adopt this approach are able to:
- expand the talent pool
- identify high-growth profiles
- build more versatile teams
What types of skills are gaining importance
Although this depends on the role, some skills consistently appear across many hiring processes.
Adaptability and learning skills
The ability to learn quickly, adapt to new environments, and embrace change.
Analytical thinking and problem-solving
Not just executing tasks, but understanding situations and making decisions.
Communication and collaboration
Especially in environments where work is increasingly cross-functional.
Impact orientation
Professionals who understand how their work contributes to business outcomes.
How to integrate a skills-based approach into recruitment processes
Adopting this approach does not require a complete overhaul of hiring processes, but rather targeted adjustments.
Redefine roles
Move from experience-based job descriptions to definitions focused on impact and capabilities.
Go beyond the CV
Include structured interviews, practical cases, or skill-based assessments.
Align internal expectations
Ensure leadership, HR, and teams share a common understanding of which skills truly matter.
Adjust decision-making
Assess potential and development capacity, not just past experience.
Toward a more flexible hiring model
The shift from experience to skills is not a replacement.
It is an evolution.
The companies adapting most effectively are those that combine both approaches:
- relevant experience
- transferable skills
- growth potential
Because in an environment where roles change rapidly, the key differentiator is often not what someone has done.
It is what they are capable of doing next.
In this context, designing processes that accurately identify these capabilities becomes critical for making better hiring decisions.
At onhunters, we work with organizations that are evolving their hiring strategies, helping them define roles from a more impact- and skills-oriented perspective, and structuring recruitment processes aligned with this reality.

