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Always good to know though, that someone with no work experience fully understands what one of the the most successful companies in the world are doing wrong...
Huh?I've actually walked out of an interview that was basically a neat way for the senior architect to show his skill. And told him that. The HR rep didn't know where to look.
I'll be honest: I've interviewed quite a few people before and I don't think I've "cracked" it yet. I think I hate doing interviews.
Having a conversation with somebody I don't mind. It's easy enough to pick up an obvious dud and after a chat over a coffee or beer you'll have a better idea of the person you are hiring.
Technical skill questions I'm not too sure about. I recently had to dumb down an entry test for grads and some are still failing. It's high school stuff in my opinion so obviously I'm struggling with realistic expectations
Coffee and beer people: that's the way interviews should go. Probation will sort out the rest.
I'll be honest: I've interviewed quite a few people before and I don't think I've "cracked" it yet. I think I hate doing interviews.
Having a conversation with somebody I don't mind. It's easy enough to pick up an obvious dud and after a chat over a coffee or beer you'll have a better idea of the person you are hiring.
Technical skill questions I'm not too sure about. I recently had to dumb down an entry test for grads and some are still failing. It's high school stuff in my opinion so obviously I'm struggling with realistic expectations
Coffee and beer people: that's the way interviews should go. Probation will sort out the rest.
I'm curious. What position was this for and what questions did you ask them?I'll be honest: I've interviewed quite a few people before and I don't think I've "cracked" it yet. I think I hate doing interviews.
Having a conversation with somebody I don't mind. It's easy enough to pick up an obvious dud and after a chat over a coffee or beer you'll have a better idea of the person you are hiring.
Technical skill questions I'm not too sure about. I recently had to dumb down an entry test for grads and some are still failing. It's high school stuff in my opinion so obviously I'm struggling with realistic expectations
Coffee and beer people: that's the way interviews should go. Probation will sort out the rest.
I'm curious. What position was this for and what questions did you ask them?
The technical questions for the gradsThe coffee/beer interview? I've only ever been on the receiving end of those and always felt like it was "better".
My wife works for an investment bank who interviews like this, but they do 5 to 6 iterations with different 2-man teams until they are sure you are a culture fit.
The technical questions for the grads
I'm going to study a diploma in IT but I have to do a maths bridging module this year. I did a 1 year boot camp sort of thing through college of ct but I felt it was a waste. The whole year the lecturers were frequently absent. It did give me a intro to c# programming which counts for something. I'm self-studying react and getting to node. Do you think I'm employable as a web developer? It's been 2 years out of high school and I want to be able to help out with the bills because of the current climate. If I was interviewing for a junior web developer job what would you ask me?
Somewhat related to this, and the difficulty in assessing the real day to day performance/capability of candidates, we have done away with 3 month probation.
All our staff start on a 3 month fixed contract. If after those 3 months we are happy and they are happy, we move to a permanent employment contract.
I am very clear with my expectations up front what is required to be a developer here.
Candidates that don’t want to do this process don’t get offers.
Most of our hires move to perm after 3 months.