Skills-Based vs. Competency-Based Assessment

Understanding the distinction between skills-based and competency-based hiring is essential.

Though they sound alike, they differ in focus and method. This article will provide clarity on skills-based vs competency-based assessment.

Skills-Based Hiring

This prioritises the specific abilities and knowledge directly relevant to a role—what a person can do. Evaluations are practical and performance-driven, such as coding tests, technical assessments, portfolio reviews, or certifications.

This approach values demonstrated capability over formal credentials. For example, a job description might list Python proficiency and data analysis, with candidates screened via online tests or work samples.

As one Amazon HR leader put it, it’s about hiring “based on capabilities and what they can achieve rather than their education and experience on a CV.”

Competency-Based Hiring

This assesses broader traits—how a person approaches work. Competencies combine skills, behaviours, and attitudes. For instance, “strategic planning” may include analytical thinking, decision-making, and leadership.

This method has long been used by major firms, often through behavioural interviews asking candidates to describe past experiences (e.g. “Tell me about a time…”). The aim is to predict future performance based on past behaviour.

In short: skills are the “what”, and competencies are the “how.” Someone may code in Java (skill), but their approach to software design or troubleshooting reflects their competency. Competency models also include personal attributes like grit or empathy, which influence performance.

Skills based vs competency based assessment

Large companies have traditionally favoured competency-based methods, especially for leadership roles. Many use structured interviews and competency dictionaries (e.g. communication, strategic thinking). Amazon, for example, uses its Leadership Principles to guide interviews and assess cultural attributes.

However, competency-based hiring has limitations. It often relies on past experience, which can disadvantage capable candidates without formal roles. It may also be subjective and slow to reflect emerging technical skills.

By contrast, skills-based hiring is more inclusive and task-focused. It allows candidates to prove themselves through demonstrations.

For example, IBM, expanded its talent pool by using skill tests and bootcamp credentials, hiring those who could code or analyse data regardless of their academic background.

Leading organisations now blend both approaches. A “skills-first” process might begin with a technical assessment, followed by a behavioural interview.

Skills based and Competency based

LinkedIn research shows many hiring managers still use experience as a proxy for skills, but skills tests offer concrete evidence that can win over sceptics.

Ultimately, both methods serve different purposes. Skills-based hiring verifies whether someone can do the job; competency-based hiring assesses whether they’ll thrive in the role and culture. The future lies in combining both—moving beyond education and tenure to focus on capability and potential.

You May Also Like

What is skills-based Hiring Model →
Understanding what skills based hiring is.

The value of skills-based hiring  →
Adopting a skills-based hiring model delivers measurable business value.

How to structure interviews →
Learn how to achieve better results from structured interviews

Vic Okezie is a talent acquisition leader and coach. He coaches experienced professionals to help then land Senior IC, Director and Leadership roles. Learn more →

Latest Insights

  • Replace Your CV With Portfolio of Impact

    The traditional CV no longer does enough heavy lifting. It was built to list roles, titles, and responsibilities. However, in today’s hiring market, that information rarely differentiates you. Recruiters move fast, hiring managers mitigate risk, and competition intensifies during every hiring cycle. In this environment, descriptions fall flat but outcomes cut through. That is why

    Read More →

  • Build a Career Strategy That Survives Hiring Cycles

    The job market goes through ups and downs. Hiring booms can quickly turn into freezes, in‑demand roles can lose momentum, and even strong performers can hit roadblocks they don’t control. Still, some professionals keep moving forward—finding new opportunities, growing their influence, and maintaining momentum no matter the market. The difference isn’t luck; it’s having a

    Read More →

  • How to Navigate a Career Transition

    A career transition is about reframing your strengths, targeting your learning, and leveraging relationships to move horizontally or diagonally into a new space. Think of your career as a lattice, not a ladder – a series of intentional moves that build breadth, range, and long‑term resilience. A Five‑Step Career Transition Approach 1. Map Your Transferable

    Read More →