In my experience, yes . . . there are times when a candidate's experience does not well align up to the position being offered and the responsibilities of said job, and positions they held in the past have greater responsibility, the quality of past productions maybe of higher caliber, or the size and scope of the production maybe smaller then what they are used to in the past.
I think many people think a good stage manager can stage manage anything, but the reality is each project, each position – has a certain skillset that the position requires. If a person who is higher seriously lacks that skillset, they run the risk of not succeeding. But, what are the risks of hiring someone who is “over qualified”.
In my experience, these are the issues that can arise when a candidate is “over-qualified”.
1) They can get bored. A bored employee often complains, slacks off, does less than an ideal job. For example, in my years running a department with intern positions, I learned to strongly avoid offering an internship to someone who already had completed an internship.
2) They can have an attitude. If they are over qualified and they know it, they might bring a lot of “well, when I worked on Broadway”. And even if it’s not a deliberate attitude, this can creep in throughout their process.
3) They may have forgotten the skillsets needed to work at this level. For example, I tend to work on big shows, with big stage management teams – recently I filled a gap in my calendar with a festival and a reading – I had to run my own light board, projections, sound . . . do pre-set and strike. I had to flex some muscles I hadn’t had used in years. On the reading, I was getting coffee, lunch orders, etc . . . anything to keep it going.
4) They are doing the show for the wrong reasons. On my current project, there are rumors of potential future life, where I had many over qualified candidates trying to get on the team, even if it meant slipping in as a PA. This happens all the time on Broadway – over qualified SMs become PA’s hoping to get moved up, gain a coveted sub position or future replacement. If those future life possibilities aren’t there, or future positions aren’t possible . . . this person may quickly look for something else.
5) Over qualified stage managers seeking work will often jump ship for a job that more aligns with the experience. Sometimes this is a status thing, but often a SM who is “over qualified”, and taking a position that is “a step down”, are often doing so with a pay cut. If a better paying gig comes along, they will quickly jump ship – and many contracts offer that exit plan.
6) For a wide variety of the above reasons, over qualified candidates can be poison to a team . . . I have seen SM’s take a break and be a “ASM”, but did so to get on a show or project with hopes of getting the PSM to move out, so they could step up. Not all Stage Managers are good guys. And the business can be very cut throat.
7) Ultimately, if a candidate is “over qualified” they by definition they may not be a great fit for the project. In my history, if 100% is what I am looking for – I have a candidate who is at 90% or at 110%, I may lean towards the 90% candidate – they may hustle and work a bit harder.
Okay, but there are reasons and times to look at candidate who might be overly qualified, but I think it’s one of those things whyou feel out during the interview process.
1) Are they taking this position for the RIGHT reasons?
1) This job fills a short, but specific time period between two gigs. If a candidate is doing show #1 and show #3 at theater, taking a step down just to fill the time period makes sense – especially if it the stop-gap job fits nicely between projects . . . and there is little chance they would jump for another project.
2) They have very clear goals for taking a job that maybe over qualified – they are starting to work in musicals, classical theater, opera, dance . . . and they want a safe environment to work in that new medium. They maybe switching from the non-profit world to commercial world. They may have relocated. These are all smart reasons for someone to take a position they may be over qualified for. But, they have to have the right attitude to handle this – get to know the candidate.
3) This often comes up – they need the health care weeks before a certain time period.
I am not saying these reasons cancel out my concerns from above, you still have to make sure the have the right personality for the job.
2) Maybe there only candidates you can get are over qualified?
3) Maybe the project has a very simple skill set required (like a reading), but the personalities involved maybe difficult.
4) Maybe the person is really right for the project – and clear