Here’s something worth thinking about.
References are theatre.
Not useless. Not irrelevant. But theatre.
Because what happens in reality?
People choose their cheerleaders.
They choose the manager who likes them.
The colleague who will say glowing things.
The person who will talk about how hardworking, reliable and brilliant they are.
And of course they do. Why wouldn’t they?
But that’s exactly the problem.
References Rarely Tell You Anything New
By the time you’re checking references, you’ve already:
- Reviewed the CV
- Conducted interviews
- Assessed technical capability
- Evaluated culture fit
The reference stage rarely uncovers something shocking.
What it usually confirms is this:
“They were great.”
“We’d hire them again.”
“They were a valuable member of the team.”
It’s predictable.
Because no one nominates someone who’s going to say, “Actually, they struggled.”
So if references are largely positive by design, what should you really be focusing on?
Proof Over Praise
Instead of relying on applause, dig into evidence.
Ask:
- What outcomes did they deliver?
- What numbers improved because of them?
- What risks did they reduce?
- What revenue did they influence?
- What processes did they improve?
- What changed as a result of their work?
That’s where the signal is.
Anyone can describe themselves as strategic, commercial or detail-oriented.
Not everyone can explain:
“I reduced reporting time by 30 percent.”
“I improved cash flow forecasting accuracy from X to Y.”
“I implemented a new system that saved £200k annually.”
That’s verifiable.
That’s tangible.
That’s what separates performance from personality.
Being Likeable Isn’t the Same as Being Effective
Of course culture matters.
You absolutely want to know someone is professional, collaborative and decent to work with.
No one is suggesting hiring purely on numbers without regard for behaviour.
But being a good human and being good at your job are not the same thing.
And hiring decisions should test both.
Too many businesses lean heavily on:
“They seem nice.”
“Great reference.”
“Everyone speaks highly of them.”
Nice doesn’t scale a finance function.
Nice doesn’t fix a broken reporting process.
Nice doesn’t improve margin.
Competence does.
Evidence does.
Track record does.
How to Assess Properly
If you’re hiring, shift your weight of assessment earlier in the process.
Instead of relying on references to validate capability, build validation into the interview process itself.
Ask for specifics:
- “Talk me through the exact impact you had.”
- “How did you measure success?”
- “What changed because you were there?”
- “What would your CFO say you improved?”
Push for detail.
If someone can clearly explain the problem, their approach and the outcome, you don’t need a cheerleader to confirm they’re strong.
Their thinking will show it.
For Candidates: This Is Good News
If you’re applying for roles, this should actually reassure you.
Because it means the most powerful thing you can bring isn’t a glowing reference.
It’s clarity.
Instead of leaning on:
“My manager would say I’m great.”
Lead with:
“Here’s what I delivered.”
Be specific.
Use numbers where possible.
Explain context and impact.
When you communicate value clearly, references become a formality, not a crutch.
The Bottom Line
References aren’t meaningless.
But they are curated.
They are controlled.
They are, to an extent, performance.
Real hiring confidence comes from evidence.
From outcomes.
From measurable impact.
From digging into whether someone is actually good at what they do.
Because praise is easy to arrange.
Proof is harder to fake.
And proof is what builds strong teams.