| I'm not really sure. In a modern environment, never have I been asked to solve a business problem with: No internet access,
No configured editor,
With massive time pressure,
In a room full of strangers,
In my chicken scratch with a fat marker. It's not that whiteboard interviews are bad. They're just severely outdated. They stem from a previous time before it was cheap and easy to interview engineers on actual hardware. We know that whiteboards are a bad metric. Dozens of scientific studies show that the most effective hiring practice is a general intelligence test coupled with a work sample test. It's easy enough to create a coding problem as a work sample. Why do we test a proxy for the work, rather than the work itself? |