CONFESSION #002:
MOCK DEMO RITUALS
I tell candidates that our hiring process is structured. I tell them we use rubrics and frameworks. I tell them the mock demo is not about mastering our product.
It is about communication. It is about clarity. It is about narrative.
All of it sounds legitimate when I say it out loud. None of it is true.
Mock demos exist because they give me more surface area to reject someone without admitting why.
If I do not like the candidate, I can point to their pacing. If I feel threatened, I can point to the slide flow. If their confidence makes me uneasy, I can call it tone. And if I simply do not want them on the team, I can say they are not technical enough.
It is an easy excuse. It works on every candidate, at every company, in every hiring cycle.
The more I ask them to perform, the more angles I have to pretend my instinct is evaluation. I know this because I use it. Every VP of Sales does.
The mock demo is not a predictor of success. It is a filter for people who can memorize a script and deliver it with conviction. That is all.
The skill that actually matters is already visible in the first conversation. You know it. I know it. Everyone in this industry knows it. Yet we make them mock-sell a product they barely understand so we can feel like we are running a disciplined process.
I also hire for reasons I never say. I want someone strong, but not too strong. Someone who will execute without slowing down to question the premise. Someone who will run through a wall because I told them to. Someone capable, but not so capable that they become a threat.
Hiring people smarter than me sounds noble on LinkedIn. In practice, it feels like volunteering to be replaced.
Even when I run the process the way I claim it should be run, it does not matter. The founder steps in. They watched part of a recording. They liked the energy. They dismissed the red flags. They saw something I apparently missed. They tell me to take a second look.
That is when you remember hail marys do not care what department they land in. They move through hiring the same way they move through deals. The decision is already shifting. The notes get rewritten to match the outcome.
After enough cycles, you stop pretending the process is real. You see the instinct beneath it. You see the bias. You see the influence.
Mock demos create the illusion of rigor, but the outcome is driven by whatever force happens to be loudest that week.
They call it structured hiring, but I know the truth. We all do.
