For years, hiring conversations have centered on experience, technical expertise, and industry knowledge.
Those things still matter. But they may not matter in quite the same way they did just a few years ago.
A recent article from Chief Executive explored what leadership might look like in 2031, arguing that as AI makes information more accessible, judgment will become one of the defining qualities of successful leaders.
That observation extends well beyond the CEO's office. It raises an important question for every growing business:
If AI can help people complete more technical tasks, what qualities should we be looking for when we hire?
Businesses still need accountants who understand accounting, engineers who can solve technical problems, and HR professionals who know employment law.
AI doesn't replace expertise. It enhances it.
The difference is that technical knowledge is becoming easier to access. Answers that once required years of experience can now be found, summarized, or analyzed in seconds.
That changes where real value is created.
AI can provide options. It can't take responsibility for a decision.
It can summarize employee feedback. It can't determine whether someone deserves another opportunity after making a mistake.
It can identify patterns in hiring data. It can't tell you whether a candidate will earn the trust of a team, thrive under a particular manager, or strengthen your culture.
Those decisions still require judgment. And judgment isn't something you can download. It's developed through experience, curiosity, critical thinking, and the ability to weigh competing priorities.
As AI handles more routine work, the qualities that often determine long-term success become increasingly human.
Can someone ask thoughtful questions?
Do they adapt when circumstances change?
Can they navigate ambiguity?
Do they collaborate well with others?
Can they make sound decisions when there isn't a perfect answer?
Those aren't new skills. But they may become more important than ever.
This is one reason we've long believed hiring should go beyond checking qualifications and matching keywords on a résumé.
A candidate may have every technical credential you're looking for. That doesn't necessarily mean they'll succeed in your organization.
Hiring for long-term success requires understanding how someone thinks, communicates, learns, and approaches challenges. It means looking beyond whether they can do the job to whether they're likely to thrive doing it.
As technology continues to evolve, that distinction becomes even more important.
The businesses that succeed over the next decade won't simply be the ones that adopt the newest technology. They'll be the ones that build teams capable of adapting alongside it.
Technology will continue to change.
Markets will change.
Customer expectations will change.
The people who thrive will be those who are curious enough to keep learning, thoughtful enough to exercise good judgment, and adaptable enough to navigate what's next.
Those are the qualities that help organizations grow, regardless of what new technology comes along.
Technical skills may get someone in the door. Judgment, adaptability, and the ability to work well with others are what help people, and businesses, succeed over the long term.
Hiring for today's needs is important. Hiring for tomorrow's business is even more important.
If you're rethinking what you look for in candidates, download our free guide, 7 Tips for Finding and Retaining Talent. It offers practical strategies to help you build a hiring process that goes beyond technical qualifications and identifies people who are positioned to succeed for the long term.
Or, if you’re taking a closer look at your hiring process or want a second look at how it holds up today, we’re always available to talk it through. Let's have a conversation.