Company: BrightPath EdTech (fictitious), an education technology startup building adaptive learning platforms for K-12 students.
Background:
BrightPath is hiring a Senior Manager for Product Operations—a role that pays Rs 18–22 lakhs annually. It’s an important position, but not a leadership one. The job involves coordinating between product, tech, and customer success teams, managing timelines, and ensuring smooth execution. Solid work. Steady work. Not glamorous.
Then an unexpected application arrives.
The Candidate:
Nisha Malhotra is a former VP at a top-tier edtech company. IIM graduate. Fifteen years of experience. She’s led teams of 50+, managed P&Ls of Rs 100 crore, and been quoted in financial dailies and other B2B trade media . On paper, she’s absurdly overqualified.
And she’s willing to take a 40 per cent pay cut and step down two levels.
In her interviews, she’s disarmingly candid: “I burnt out in my last role. I was working 70-hour weeks, travelling constantly, and missing my daughter’s childhood. I want work-life balance and meaningful impact over designation. I know this role is smaller. That’s the point.”
She’s clearly the strongest candidate the panel has seen. Her strategic thinking is sharp. Her execution instincts are flawless. She asks smarter questions than the interviewers.
But the hiring manager is hesitant.
The Hesitation:
“What if she gets bored in six months?” he asks HR. “What if she leaves after a year when something bigger comes along? And honestly—will she accept being managed by someone ten years younger with half her experience? Won’t that create awkwardness in the team?”
HR is now caught. Hire her and risk team dynamics, ego clashes, and potential flight risk? Or reject her as “overqualified” and lose a potentially transformative hire based on assumptions about what she might do?
The Dilemma:
Should BrightPath hire Nisha—getting exceptional talent at a bargain, but accepting the uncertainty of whether she’ll stay and adapt? Or reject her—playing it safe, but reinforcing the idea that unconventional career choices are punished, not embraced?
What’s really at stake:
This is a test of whether “overqualified” is a legitimate hiring concern or unconscious bias dressed up as risk management. It’s also about whether organisations can handle people who choose downward mobility intentionally—or whether the only acceptable career path is relentlessly upward.
And it raises an uncomfortable question: if companies claim to value work-life balance and purpose over titles, why do they distrust people who actually live those values?
What HR leaders said:
Ravi Mishra, head–HR, BITS Pilani

“The very idea of ‘overqualification’ is deeply flawed. Qualification, education, and experience are not meant only for a job title—they’re meant for life, learning, and contribution.
The real risk in hiring comes from someone knowing less than what the role demands. That gap can cause real harm—to business outcomes, safety, credibility. But excess knowledge or experience, by itself, does not create risk.
I’ve seen many situations where individuals consciously choose roles below their formal qualifications—for personal reasons, family responsibilities, health concerns, or a desire for lower stress. Years later, some may regret that decision and compare themselves with peers who moved faster. But that regret cannot be retroactively turned into an organisational failure.
What HR must be firm about is clarity. If someone applies for a role knowingly, at a certain level with a certain scope, the organisation must hold that boundary whilst still enabling growth through merit—not entitlement.
Dismissing candidates as ‘overqualified’ reflects a misunderstanding of both human motivation and workforce diversity. People choose roles for many reasons. Our responsibility is not to judge that choice—but to assess whether they can deliver meaningfully in the role they’re asking for.”
Chetna Gogia, CHRO, GoKwik

“The hesitation rarely comes from the candidate’s capability—it comes from the organisation’s discomfort. A strong résumé unsettles hiring managers, especially when it doesn’t follow a predictable upward trajectory. But career paths today are no longer linear ladders; they are mosaics shaped by life stages, personal priorities, and evolving definitions of success.
When senior professionals consciously step down, it’s rarely impulsive. It reflects a deliberate shift towards balance, purpose, and sustainable work. A strong résumé should not intimidate hiring managers or be mistaken for future risk.
What matters is intent. Does the individual understand the scope of the role as it exists today? Are they aligned with the organisation’s culture, pace, and expectations? Are they emotionally prepared to operate without the authority they once held? When these questions are explored honestly, many perceived risks dissolve.
Cultural alignment becomes the real litmus test. A candidate who respects hierarchy, embraces learning, and contributes without overshadowing others can elevate a team regardless of their past seniority. Someone with a modest résumé but misaligned values can cause far greater disruption.
For HR, the responsibility lies in looking beyond pedigree and asking the right questions. When intent, attitude, and values align, past designations become far less relevant than the impact a person can create in the role they’re choosing today.”
Pradyumna Pandey, senior HR Leader

“I see this less as an overqualification issue and more as a diversity opportunity. Diversity isn’t only about gender or background—it’s also about experience, exposure, and career journeys. Bringing in someone who has seen the system from a different altitude adds maturity to decision-making and depth to teams.
That said, motivation must be clearly understood. Why does this person want the role? In the BrightPath case, the motivation is evident—she wants to rebuild, regain balance, and create impact in a startup environment.
However, hiring such talent demands responsibility from HR. Career paths must be discussed honestly. Even if progression isn’t immediate, visibility into what the next five years could look like is essential. Experienced professionals may not push for growth on day one, but aspirations resurface once stability returns.
Outright rejection based on the ‘overqualified’ label is short-sighted. With clarity, role enrichment, and foresight, such candidates can do wonders.
The real question HR must ask is not ‘Is she overqualified?’ but ‘Are we prepared to use her potential wisely?’”
Your Turn: What would you do? Share your response in the comment box or share on LinkedIn with #HRKathaCaseInPoint

