Tips for hiring teens
Practical guidance for writing job posts that get the right applicants, running short interviews, and making strong first hires on Jobbli.
Updated May 23, 2026
5 min read
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Tips
Writing a strong job post
Most teens scan job posts in seconds. The clearer your role title, hours, and pay, the more qualified applicants you will see.
- Use a clear title (e.g. "Weekend Cashier") instead of a vague one like "Help Wanted"
- State exact working hours and days so teens can check their school schedule
- Include the minimum age requirement (14+, 15+, 16+) upfront
- List the pay range. Posts with a visible salary attract more applications
- Mention teen-friendly perks: flexible scheduling, paid training, free meals
- Say if no prior experience is needed
- Include your exact location, since many teens rely on transit or rides
Tips
Reviewing applications
Most teen applicants have little or no formal experience. Read for potential, reliability, and fit instead of polish.
- Look for potential, not work history
- Notice signs of commitment: sports teams, volunteering, school clubs
- Check schedule compatibility before spending time on an interview
- Respond to every applicant within 48 hours
- Do not filter based on polished writing. Teens are still building professional communication skills
Tips
Running the interview
Keep teen interviews short, structured, and predictable. Most useful information surfaces in the first 20 minutes.
- Keep it between 15 and 25 minutes
- Introduce yourself and explain what the next 20 minutes will look like
- Ask open-ended questions ("Tell me about a time you solved a problem")
- Walk through what a real shift looks like, from clock-in to clock-out
- Leave at least 5 minutes for the candidate to ask their own questions
- Be patient with pauses. First-time interviewees often need a moment
- Close by telling them exactly when and how you will follow up
Tips
Best practices
Recommended:
- Share your decision within 48 hours of the interview
- Use the same core questions for every candidate applying to the same role
- Give brief feedback even when declining an applicant
- Be flexible around exam periods and school events
- Use small, specific encouragement in the first few shifts ("you handled that customer well")
Avoid:
- Going silent on candidates after an interview
- Expecting corporate-level polish from first-time applicants
- Asking about family, religion, or personal life
- Making hiring decisions based on gut feeling without clear criteria
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