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Senior Frontend Engineer Interview Scorecard

ZYTHR Resources September 6, 2025

TL;DR

This scorecard standardizes evaluation of Senior Frontend Engineer candidates across technical craft, architecture, quality, performance, UX, collaboration, and leadership. It helps interviewers give consistent, evidence-based ratings to predict on-the-job success.

Who this scorecard is for

For hiring managers, tech leads, and interviewers evaluating senior frontend engineering candidates. Use during technical screens, take-home assessments, and on-site interviews to guide scoring and feedback.

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A ready-to-use Senior Frontend Engineer Interview Scorecard template

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How to use and calibrate

  • Pick the level (Junior, Mid, Senior, or Staff) and adjust anchor examples accordingly.
  • Use the quick checklist during the call; fill the rubric within 30 minutes after.
  • Or use ZYTHR to transcribe the interview and automatically fill in the scorecard live.
  • Run monthly calibration with sample candidate answers to align expectations.
  • Average across interviewers; avoid single-signal decisions.

Detailed rubric with anchor behaviors

Frontend Technical Skills

  • 1–2: Struggles to implement basic React/JS features; frequent syntax or API misunderstandings.
  • 3: Implements components and state with common patterns and few bugs.
  • 4: Delivers reusable, well-structured components and leverages advanced framework features.
  • 5: Designs complex client-side architectures and introduces patterns that increase team velocity.

Architecture & System Design

  • 1–2: Fails to reason about component boundaries, data flow, or scaling concerns.
  • 3: Designs clear component hierarchies and selects sensible state management.
  • 4: Anticipates scalability and designs modular systems with clear contracts.
  • 5: Defines architecture choices that reduce complexity and technical debt across teams.

Code Quality & Testing

  • 1–2: Writes untested, hard-to-read code with minimal attention to maintainability.
  • 3: Produces readable code with unit tests and follows linters/formatters.
  • 4: Writes comprehensive tests, enforces standards, and performs meaningful code reviews.
  • 5: Establishes testing strategy and improves code quality metrics across the codebase.

Performance & Optimization

  • 1–2: Unaware of critical performance issues; delivers slow pages or heavy bundles.
  • 3: Identifies and fixes common bottlenecks; uses lazy loading and basic optimizations.
  • 4: Profiles apps, reduces bundle size, and implements caching strategies.
  • 5: Defines performance budgets and drives cross-team optimizations with measurable results.

UX & Accessibility

  • 1–2: Ignores accessibility and usability; components fail keyboard or screen reader checks.
  • 3: Implements basic ARIA, semantic HTML, and responsive layouts.
  • 4: Designs accessible interactions, conducts usability checks, and iterates on feedback.
  • 5: Champions accessibility standards and integrates accessibility into development process.

Collaboration & Communication

  • 1–2: Poor communicator; unclear PRs and resists feedback; blocks others.
  • 3: Communicates clearly in PRs, participates in standups, and responds to feedback.
  • 4: Facilitates cross-discipline discussions and aligns stakeholders on tradeoffs.
  • 5: Drives technical discussions, mentors others through feedback, and resolves conflicts.

Mentorship & Ownership

  • 1–2: Avoids ownership; does not mentor juniors or follow through on tasks.
  • 3: Takes ownership of features and gives constructive feedback to peers.
  • 4: Mentors teammates, improves team processes, and reliably delivers complex projects.
  • 5: Shapes hiring, onboarding, and long-term frontend strategy; grows others into senior roles.

Scoring and weighting

Default weights (adjust per role):

Dimension Weight
Frontend Technical Skills 25%
Architecture & System Design 20%
Code Quality & Testing 15%
Performance & Optimization 12%
UX & Accessibility 10%
Collaboration & Communication 10%
Mentorship & Ownership 8%

Final score = weighted average across dimensions. Require at least two “4+” signals for Senior+ roles.

Complete Examples

Senior Frontend Engineer Scorecard — Great Candidate

Dimension Notes Score (1–5)
Frontend Technical Skills Creates reusable libraries/components adopted across projects 5
Architecture & System Design Outlines architecture that simplifies cross-team integration 5
Code Quality & Testing Adds testing infrastructure and raises team testing coverage 5
Performance & Optimization Reduces load time significantly and enforces performance budgets 5
UX & Accessibility Introduces accessibility checks and improves product-wide accessibility scores 5
Collaboration & Communication Leads cross-team planning and removes blockers for others 5
Mentorship & Ownership Regularly mentors and leads initiatives that increase team capacity 5

Senior Frontend Engineer Scorecard — Good Candidate

Dimension Notes Score (1–5)
Frontend Technical Skills Builds components that meet requirements and pass tests 3
Architecture & System Design Proposes a component structure and state solution fitting the problem 3
Code Quality & Testing Well-structured code with unit tests and clear PR descriptions 3
Performance & Optimization Implements code-splitting and reduces obvious bottlenecks 3
UX & Accessibility Uses semantic HTML and addresses key accessibility issues 3
Collaboration & Communication Writes clear PRs and discusses tradeoffs constructively 3
Mentorship & Ownership Owns features end-to-end and helps peers when asked 3

Senior Frontend Engineer Scorecard — No-Fit Candidate

Dimension Notes Score (1–5)
Frontend Technical Skills Cannot build a working interactive component within time 1
Architecture & System Design Suggests tightly coupled designs that break at scale 1
Code Quality & Testing No unit tests and inconsistent code style 1
Performance & Optimization Produces pages with large bundle sizes and poor load times 1
UX & Accessibility Components inaccessible to keyboard and screen readers 1
Collaboration & Communication Does not respond to review comments and provides unclear updates 1
Mentorship & Ownership Rarely volunteers for ownership or feedback 1

Recruiter FAQs about this scorecard

Q: Do scorecards actually reduce bias?

A: Yes—when you use the same questions, anchored rubrics, and require evidence-based notes.

Q: How many dimensions should we score?

A: Stick to 6–8 core dimensions. More than 10 dilutes signal.

Q: How do we calibrate interviewers?

A: Run monthly sessions with sample candidate answers and compare scores.

Q: How do we handle candidates who spike in one area but are weak elsewhere?

A: Use weighted average but define non-negotiables.

Q: How should we adapt this for Junior vs. Senior roles?

A: Keep dimensions the same but raise expectations for Senior+.

Q: Does this work for take-home or live coding?

A: Yes. Apply the same dimensions, but adjust scoring criteria for context.

Q: Where should results live?

A: Store structured scores and notes in your ATS or ZYTHR.

Q: What if interviewers disagree widely?

A: Require written evidence, reconcile in debrief, or add a follow-up interview.

Q: Can this template be reused for other roles?

A: Yes. Swap technical dimensions for role-specific ones, keep collaboration and communication.

Q: Can ZYTHR auto-populate the scorecard?

A: Yes. ZYTHR can transcribe interviews, tag signals, and live-populate the scorecard.

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