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“We want a specialist who checks all the boxes.”
Lolwut?
I know as soon as I mention box checking in hiring there’s going to be an immediate pile on. Job descriptions that ask for a laundry list of items.
All valid. All stuff I’m not even going to touch on here.
Instead I’ll comment on the (what should be but isn’t) obvious: everybody wants to hire a specialist. Who can do all-the-things.
Deep experience in demand gen marketing (for example) but has also launched a product, does a little design, maybe some light coding, basic accounting, a background in derivatives, sub 6 minute miles and know which wine will pair correctly with the blackened halibut.
I’m kidding. Probably.
Specialists have value. Generalists have value. But for some reason companies go on a purple squirrel hunt, rolling them into one.
This is understandable when making a first hire in some skill set you haven’t hired below. Jeff Smith and I talked about this in the latest 10 Minute Talent Rant, “How To Hire Your First (Of Any Skill)” (Here.)
Hiring for new-to-your skills sets is hard. Often it’s driven by “the big initiative.” You want someone specialized in doing exactly that. Then piling on all the other things you think you may need, but let’s be frank, you really aren’t sure.
Later you find out the “big initiative” really wasn’t as big as you thought. Other more important things popped up. And the specialist you hired is miscast and frankly isn’t loving it either.
Yes, we’ve lived that life. Take it from me: when hiring a skill for the first time, you probably need more range and less specificity than you think.
Generalists check more boxes. Just don’t expect them to have 10 years of experience in 15 different skill sets…
Side note: I highly recommend Range: Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World by David Epstein. Easy read and lots of engaging anecdotes (hot takes?) on how we (as a society) got the specialization obsession all wrong.
Partner at Hirewell. #3 Ranked Sarcastic Commenter on LinkedIn.
🎧 Rethinking HR: Strategy, Growth & the Post-Corporate Shift
We sat down with Malvika Jethmalani—3x CHRO turned founder of Atvis Group—to talk about what great HR really looks like in 2025.
From performance management and manager effectiveness to people-first AI transformations, Malvika shares what companies are getting wrong—and how to fix it.
She also dives into the perks (and real challenges) of leaving corporate life to start her own advisory firm.
Whether you’re leading HR or just partnering closely with it, this one’s packed with practical wisdom.
Episode 12