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by drewg123
2784 days ago
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It is true that you will almost never work with somebody who interviewed you. In some ways, this is absolutely terribly for hiring. I worked in a part of Google where domain specific knowledge was key, and it was next to impossible to hire people because nobody on our team could interview them "officially". So we'd pre-screen people with the knowledge we needed, and then pass them off to others to officially interview. They would almost invariably fail, because their non domain-specific knowledge was not in the top 1% or whatever it takes to pass a generic interview. So we were left with the choice between hiring contractors, or training somebody internal who could leave at any time. We hired contractors. EDIT: See the sibling comment regarding the homebrew author. This situation was exactly like that. Imagine wanting to hire somebody to make an internal package manager, and not being allowed to hire the author of one of the most popular package managers because his whiteboarding skills were lackluster, so he got a poor interview score from people that have no idea (or concern) what he does or what he's being hired to do. |
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When a company policy is so obviously broken in this way and there is no way to route around it then something is very broken.
Here's how it should work. You explain the issue above to someone above you and they either have the authority to get round it or they pass it on to someone who does.
If a policy is failing in such a profound way and nobody can change it this implies a level of organisational dysfunction that must be affecting multiple aspects of the company.