You posted a job in Colombia. 50 applications came in overnight.
Now you need to figure out who can actually do the job.
Tests help, but most employers either over-test and lose good candidates, or skip testing entirely and hire on gut feeling.
This guide shows you which tests to use, when to use them, and how to avoid mistakes that make candidates walk away.
Keep Total Testing Time Under 90 Minutes
Tests should be one layer in your hiring process, not a replacement for interviews or work samples.
Keep total testing time under 60-90 minutes across your entire process.
Tell candidates which tests they’ll take, why you’re using them, how long each takes, and what good performance looks like.
The winning combination: language check, technical skills test, personality assessment, structured interview, paid work sample for finalists.
In that order.
Test English Communication for Remote Work
For remote work, verify English proficiency through actual communication tasks, not just grammar quizzes.
Use platforms like TestGorilla, Mercer Mettl, or iMocha for grammar and reading comprehension. Keep these to 15-20 minutes maximum.
Then add an async communication task. Have candidates record a 2-3 minute video explaining a past project using Loom or similar tools.
This shows how they actually communicate in remote situations, not just whether they can pass a grammar quiz.
For customer support roles, have them write sample email responses. For developers, have them document their approach to a technical problem.
You’re testing clarity and structure, not perfect English.
Design Skills Tests That Match Real Work
For Developers
Use coding challenges on HackerRank or Codility. Keep them to 30-45 minutes. Make the challenge relevant to your actual tech stack.
A Python developer needs to show they can write clean, working Python code for problems similar to what they’ll face on your team, not solve abstract algorithm puzzles.
For Designers
Request portfolio review plus a short timed design task. 30-60 minutes maximum. Give them a realistic brief with actual constraints.
For Customer Support
Test typing speed, reading comprehension, and give them a ticket simulation. Have them handle 3-4 realistic customer scenarios in writing.
Check how they prioritize, their tone, and whether they solve the problem or just respond politely.
For Sales Roles
Test CRM familiarity if you use Salesforce or HubSpot. Add a role-play scenario and written email task.
Can they write a cold outreach email that doesn’t sound like spam? Can they handle objections?
Cognitive Ability Tests
Tools like CCAT, Wonderlic, or SHL measure numerical, verbal, and logical reasoning. Keep these to 10-20 minutes.
Use scores as a risk flag, not a hard cutoff. Someone who scores lower might still be excellent if their portfolio and work samples are strong.
Position these as “problem-solving assessments” rather than IQ tests.
Use Personality Tests After Skills Verification
Personality tests cause the most candidate frustration when used wrong.
Use them after you’ve verified someone can do the job. After portfolio review, skills checks, and work samples.
At that point, you’re understanding work style and communication preferences, not screening people out.
DISC Assessment
Maps candidates into Dominance, Influence, Steadiness, and Compliance profiles.
A high-D candidate likes direct communication and quick decisions. A high-C candidate prefers detailed documentation and structured processes.
This helps you manage them effectively.
Big Five (OCEAN)
Tests openness, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, and emotional stability.
Use it to inform your management approach, not as a gate.
What Not to Do
Don’t reject introverts for all client-facing roles. Don’t treat any single personality trait as disqualifying. Don’t use unvalidated online quizzes.
Share test results with candidates. Explain what it means for how you’ll work together.
A candidate with high conscientiousness might prefer written briefs and clear deadlines. Someone with high openness might thrive with ambiguous projects needing creative solutions.
That’s useful information for both of you.
Adapt to Latin American Work Culture
Build Rapport First
Many Latin American countries are more relationship-oriented than typical US or UK workplaces.
Spend 3-5 minutes building rapport before diving into hard questions in video interviews.
If your test asks candidates to challenge requirements or find problems, explicitly state that disagreement is welcome. Written feedback can be more indirect in some cultures.
Leverage Time Zone Overlap
Latin America has strong timezone overlap with US coasts. Mexico City is in CST. Buenos Aires is only 1-2 hours ahead of EST.
Design assessment tasks that mirror async collaboration: clear written instructions, status updates, and video explanations.
Respect Local Holidays
Latin American countries offer 14-30 days of paid vacation plus many public holidays. Mexico offers triple pay for work on official holidays. Argentina’s Telework Law guarantees remote workers the same holiday rights as on-site staff.
Check local holiday calendars before scheduling tests or setting deadlines.
Ask candidates early about upcoming holidays. State all deadlines in their local timezone.
Understand Legal Requirements
US, UK, and Australian employers often treat Latin American workers as independent contractors. Several countries have strict rules that can reclassify contractors as employees.
Misclassification Risk
Brazil’s CLT, Mexico’s labor law, and Argentina’s telework statutes make misclassification expensive. If you control someone’s schedule, tools, and workflow, they might legally be an employee even if you call them a contractor.
Heavy monitoring and rigid test schedules can be used as evidence of an employment relationship.
Country-Specific Rules
Mexico: Telework is defined when more than 40% of work is remote. Employers must provide equipment, cover home office costs, and define conditions in writing.
Argentina: Telework Law 27.555 gives remote workers the same rights as on-site staff including vacation, holidays, and right to disconnect.
Peru: Requires written remote contracts, home office safety verification, and expense compensation.
If you’re hiring full-time ongoing roles, use an Employer of Record or local entity rather than contractor status.
Keep your selection tests consistent across all candidates.
Your Step-by-Step Hiring Process
Step 1: Define Role and Legal Structure
Decide if you’re hiring an employee or contractor. Choose which countries you’re open to. Use HireTalent.LAT
Map basic legal requirements for your target country before posting the job.
Step 2: Initial Screen
Ask for CV, portfolio, and a short questionnaire about internet speed, home office setup, and remote work experience.
Do a 15-20 minute English screen through written answers or async video.
Step 3: Skills and Cognitive Tests
Run one relevant skills test and one short cognitive test if appropriate. Keep total time under 60 minutes.
Anything longer should be a paid work sample.
HireTalent.LAT’s trial tasks system lets you create paid or unpaid trial tasks, assign them to specific applicants, and track payments all in one place.
Step 4: Personality Assessment
Use DISC or Big Five only for candidates you’re already interested in. Share results and discuss what they mean in your interview.
Focus on how you’ll adapt your management style.
Step 5: Structured Interview
Ask about remote work habits, timezone alignment, communication preferences, and local holidays.
Build rapport first. Then cover technical and cultural fit questions.
Step 6: Contract and Compliance
Align salary with local market rates. Offer vacation time matching local norms, not US standards.
Document remote setup, working hours, and expense reimbursement in writing according to local regulations.
Bottom Line
Skills and personality tests help you hire better remote talent in Latin America when used thoughtfully.
Keep tests under 90 minutes total.
Test job-relevant skills, not test-taking ability. Use personality assessments to inform management, not eliminate candidates.
Adapt to local culture and holidays. Stay compliant with local labor laws.
Treat candidates like professionals who could become key team members, not like data points.
Do that and you’ll build a talent pipeline that actually wants to work with you.
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