| ACM and IEEE Computer Society also host meetings "where one of the goals is to connect grad students with companies." When I was in school, the local ACM chapter had meetings which which even helped undergraduates find internships and jobs. All of the major ACM conferences have a job fair. Most of the minor ones as well. > "What is it about applying the same techniques to tech that makes them special" There is nothing special about tech. The same is true for most fields. Where is your central source where you can hire a chemist? Usually, the potential chemist hire comes to the site, talks to people, gives a job talk, etc. > "say they HAVE to give these multi-day long technical screens" The link you gave to AirBNB says it's one day technical screen, and candidates which pass that screen have a followup with four non-tech interviews. It is not a "multi-day long technical screen". |
If we stick with AirBnB here is a posting they made with the AEA (https://www.aeaweb.org/joe/listing.php?JOE_ID=2015-02_111454...).
All of the interviewing takes place at the AEA meeting and the candidate is expecting to have their Job Market paper (a completed technical project that is used for presenting at all of your interviews).
The American Statistical Association has something similar with their Joint Statistical Meeting (https://www.amstat.org/meetings/jsm/2016/employerlist.cfm).
Once I finish grad school I wouldn't do any type of homework for a job interview. If you can't read one of my papers then I just wouldn't be interested.