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by oblio 2872 days ago
I'd say you should stick to your guns - I like your approach. Interviews are inherently adversarial: "are you good enough for us to hire you?", "are you better than the other 5-10-1000 candidates". As a result there's a built-in bias which makes whiteboarding a bad fit.

I've written code on white boards at work, and I've discussed about code on white board with colleagues or managers. It's not the same thing as during interviews. The schedule is never as tight, scrutiny is way laxer and the overall mood is completely different when I'm working with colleagues or even bosses.

I kind of understand why the BigCo's do it (they need a super rigid filter since they have so many candidates), but in their case they could select for people with the best pink leotard on interview day and they'd still get decent programmers, because their companies are in such high demand and they generally already control their markets (software, natural monopolies, etc.) and can afford to pay a ton so the competition would be cutthroat anyway.