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by stanrivers
1924 days ago
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I've seen that happen in hiring decisions as well. Junior people are in charge of screening candidates... really strong candidates, if hired, will make the average employee look bad. So, why should the person screening the candidates suggest the strongest candidates? This is why I tend to suggest equal seniority individuals should not screen candidates. It's a subconscious thing ("He's too aggressive" "She seems like not a good culture fit" "He is too senior for this role") that most people don't think of directly, but happens. |
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A stock compensation helps in that regard: hiring strong individuals will help ship a better product faster and should increase the stock value. Meanwhile traditional stack-ranking and a mostly salary compensation will encourage individuals to make sure they are seen as the top performer no matter what.