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by lostmymind66
2535 days ago
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I interviewed for a position last year where the company had a very successful product and was growing, but still small. They wanted to restructure everything (the way they code, teams, management style) to be more like Google. I made it to the last interview stage, which would have been a 4 hour remote white-boarding session, where they would give me something to code and a team of developers would watch me. I turned it turned it down and found a much better position the next day. The first stage of the interview was light technical and almost all a psychological test to see if I would be a good 'culture' fit. The interviewer was a first-time 20-something manager that wanted to make a name for himself and had read a few silicon valley books about technical interviews. He actually told me this. Most companies aren't Google and shouldn't be emulating much of anything there. |
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To take your interview example, you can't really convince a company (or anyone for that matter) they are doing something wrong, if what they're doing is making them money/success. It is a very powerful form of feedback that gets ingrained and is almost impossible to shakeoff.