| > There's still quite a lot of signal for an interviewer in someone being ready to do the extra work to achieve the goal (e.g. study for interview) vs. someone how doesn't want to invest time into studying and just wants to throw stuff together. There's still quite a lot of signal for an interviewer in someone being ready to do the extra work to achieve the goal (e.g. write a real application) vs. someone how doesn't want to invest time into writing a real application and just wants to play with little algorithms and exercises. Now if you smell a straw man or false dichotomy (hint: writing software instead of cramming leetcode doesn't mean you're not learning new skills; and vice versa) in this, you're on the right track. The other thing is, what exactly is this signal? What does it tell the interviewer? They have their prejudice, so the signal tells them what they want to hear. Maybe the actual signal is "I'm bored and desperate and don't have real skills and can't think of anything creative to do so I'll just cram leetcode until some unfortunate company thinks I'm leet and hires me. Because someone on the internet told me that's how you get a job." This is why I'm not very keen to hand wave about "signal" if there's no way to give it an unambiguous interpretation. In these hiring discussions, I've seen so many examples of "signal" that can be interpreted any number of ways but someone thought they came up with a clever interviewing method so their interpretation of the signal must be right... right? If it's a hazing ritual and lots of jumping through hoops, the only signal you have is that a person is willing to go through a hazing ritual and jump through hoops. Don't assume anything else. In particular, don't assume it says anything about the skills or capabilities of those who are not willing to go through it. |