Interview kit · 2026
Delivery Manager interview questions
A curated set of 8 questions for technical and behavioural rounds with delivery managers. Tap any card for what to listen for.
Interview prep
Questions to ask a delivery manager
Grouped by area. Pick 3–4 per round; calibrate as a panel after each candidate.
3
Maximum rounds
Top delivery managers drop out of processes longer than 3 rounds. Run a 30-min intro, a technical deep-dive, and a final with team & leadership - no take-homes longer than 2 hours.
Skills to probe in delivery manager interviews
3 core · 2 nice to have
Core stack
Nice to have
Interviewing tips
The delivery manager hiring playbook
Delivery Manager specialist or generalist - which should you hire?
The honest answer depends on the half-life of your delivery manager surface area. If you expect to keep investing in Agile coaching and Process improvement work over the next 18-24 months, a specialist delivery manager will out-deliver a generalist on day-30 throughput and stakeholder confidence.
If your team is under ten people, or delivery manager responsibilities are spread across two or three roles already, hire a strong generalist who has shipped this work in anger at least twice. The cross-disciplinary pattern recognition will pay for itself the first time priorities collide.
On Haystack we surface both - filtered by whether the candidate self-identifies as a delivery manager specialist and verified against their last two roles. We benchmark live salary data on every offer.
What strong delivery managers actually bring
A great delivery manager is not the one with the longest CV - it is the one who has owned a hard Agile coaching call and changed how they work because of how it landed. Across the product & delivery hires we have placed in 2025-2026, the same patterns keep showing up.
- An opinion on what NOT to do with Agile coaching, backed by an example where adding it would have hurt the team.
- Delivery Managers who pair Process improvement depth with cross-functional fluency - they bring product, design and data into their decisions, not just engineering.
- A written 30/60/90 plan in week one, anchored to Agile coaching delivery milestones rather than ramp-up vanity metrics.
- Versioned, observable delivery manager work - measurable outputs, structured logs of decisions, and a clear rollback path on every change.
Red flags when interviewing delivery managers
Every discipline has its own pattern of plausible-sounding answers that fall apart in production. For delivery managers, these are the patterns that most often correlate with a six-month regret hire on the employer side.
- Defines "senior delivery manager" purely by years of experience, not by the scope of decisions they own.
- Lists Process improvement on the CV but cannot describe a single trade-off they hit in production - all framework, no friction.
- Treats the delivery manager role as a job title rather than a problem to solve - no opinion on what they would change about how the discipline is typically practised.
- Only ever worked on greenfield delivery manager projects - inheriting a messy, half-built system is a different muscle.
A sample take-home for delivery manager candidates
When teams ask us how to evaluate a delivery manager beyond a CV and a chat, we recommend a 90-minute paid take-home that mirrors real work, not a trivia quiz. The brief below is one we have refined with employers hiring across product & delivery teams.
Give the candidate a small, intentionally imperfect artefact tied to "own team delivery cadence and process". Their task is to add a second capability - tied to "unblock teams and manage dependencies" - while keeping existing behaviour intact. Then grade in three parts.
- Correctness: the new work satisfies the brief and at least one edge case the candidate flags themselves.
- Judgement: did they refactor, wrap or work around the existing imperfection? Any of the three is fine - we are listening for the reasoning, not the verdict.
- Communication: a short written note explaining what they would do differently with another week, what they noticed about Agile coaching, Process improvement and Stakeholder management, plus working exposure to Team health and Reporting, and the assumptions they made along the way.
What to expect in the first 30 days from a Haystack delivery manager hire
By week one, the new delivery manager should have shipped a small, low-risk artefact to production or a stakeholder - a docs fix, a small process change, a first review on someone else's work. The goal is to validate the loop, not to ship anything heroic.
By week two, the delivery manager is shadowing the active workstreams, attending standups in observe-mode, and asking pointed questions about why specific decisions were made. If they are not asking those questions, the hire is going to plateau.
By day 30, they own one cleanly-scoped slice of the delivery manager surface area, have published a public ramp-up doc, and are the named point of contact for stakeholders inside that slice. Every Haystack employer gets a structured onboarding template, so you are not reinventing the playbook each hire.
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