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by downerending 2416 days ago
My experience (as an applicant) was similar. Google, of course, has so many qualified applicants that oddities like this don't really matter much in terms of their final pool.

I do wonder, though, if they will eventually accumulate a reputation for this sort of thing that might harm them. For myself, I no longer respond to their emails either.

2 comments

My understanding of Google is that they're ok with false negatives because they consider false positives to be far far worse.
False negatives are a burden on your candidates, false positives are a burden on your organization.

You'd be surprised how often the answer to 'Should we hire' has more to do with 'He felt like he would be a dick' rather than 'He doesn't know X and Y technology'.

That's the way it should be. A good candidate can learn X and Y, but it's hard to unlearn being a dick.
I am not a Google employee, but from working with ex and subsequent Googlers and from interviewing Googlers, Google has some blind spots (perhaps intentional). It places more weight on algorithms (which can be gamed with study) and less weight on architecture, design, and coding.

This sometimes results in candidates who can’t code well or engineers who badly overengineer.

That said, some of the best candidates have been from Google. Perhaps getting those best people was worth a certain percentage of what I consider borderline false positives.

Also, their ahole filter is imperfect. Just as with algorithms, you have people gaming the not an ahole filter.

Their reputation would have to tank to the point where they couldn't get a single qualified applicant for each position they have open. Unless there's another event which makes people reluctant to apply to Google, I don't see it happening in my lifetime.