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by Beltiras 3373 days ago
I've been using this exact analogy the other way around about hiring in IT. First screening is usually some HR drone scanning your resume/cv for buzzwords.

HR: So, I see on your resume you have been building houses for a decade. This is a good foundation for the work we are doing. Applicant carpenter: Yes, all sorts of houses. Done both interiors and prep for concrete pouring. Fiddled a little bit with wiring on a job where the electrician needed some help. HR: Uhu. Yes. What vendor did you use for your tools? AC: Pardon? HR: Well, we have secured a really good deal on tools from Stanley. Are you familiar with their hammers? AC: (puzzled) uhn, sure. I'm not too sure what I used on my last site. For me a hammer is a hammer. It has to be a really crappy tool not to do it's work. HR: Thank you for coming in. I think you should expect a call from us sometime next week. (marks the checkbox, Not familiar with tools)

Coding is usually based around learning the solution we are employing. It's a very boring problem if the solution is known beforehand. It's now knowing the tools that make you effective, it's being able to learn them that is valuable about a knowledge worker.