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The Hidden Cost of Engineering Interviews: How Hiring Slows Down Product Delivery

Posted by Kat Stam | March 4, 2026

Full-stack developers switching between coding work and technical interviews in a software engineering team

The hidden tax no one talks about in engineering teams

Most companies think their hiring problem is finding good engineers.

It isn’t.

It’s the productivity they quietly burn while trying to find them.

Every interview looks harmless. One hour here, one hour there. A quick chat. A coding test. A culture fit call.

Next thing you know, one of your engineering colleagues conducts 40 interviews in 1 week. No actual tech work done.

And if this is not a horror story already, add it up across a growing team, and something uncomfortable appears.

You, as a company, are paying your best engineers to not build your product .

Tech assessments are not free. They are actually expensive.

A full-stack engineer doesn’t just pause work for an interview.

Their flow is disturbed. They lose momentum. They drop deep focus.

They context-switch out of complex problems and try to get back in later, which rarely happens cleanly. Maybe, tomorrow, but not today.

That 1-hour interview often costs 2 hours of productive work, sometimes even half a day of real engineering output.

Unfortunately, nobody puts that on a spreadsheet.

The scaling trap

Here’s the loop most companies fall into:

You grow → you hire more → you need more interviews →
your best engineers interview more →
your product slows down →
so you hire even more.

It looks like progress but it is an often disguised stagnation.

The uncomfortable truth

Your hiring process might be one of your biggest hidden productivity drains.

Not because interviews are bad.

But because your most valuable engineers and product people are doing them instead of building.

The real question

Most teams optimise interviews for quality of hires.

Very few optimise for cost of engineering time lost.

So the question becomes: How much engineering output are you willing to trade for every hire you make? And are you measuring it?

This will help

We build a Total Hiring Needs calculator: https://assess.dev/interview-hours-calculator.

It helps you calculate how much time it will take you to interview and assess all candidates to reach your hiring target.

It shows you how much money you will spend on conducting interviews in-house so when you start preparing your next hiring sprint, you have all the numbers you need in front of your eyes.

Final thought

Hiring is necessary.

But so is shipping.

The best engineering teams don’t just improve who they hire.

They aggressively protect the time of the people already building the product.

Because every hour spent interviewing is an hour not spent moving the company forward.