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by akarma
1819 days ago
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I think degrees are remaining a requirement because a hiring manager and recruiter at a large company are risk averse. There's an old saying: "Nobody ever got fired for buying IBM." It basically means that, if you use IBM for something and it doesn't work out, you can tell your manager "who could've guessed — it's IBM!", and you'll be mostly off the hook. If you were to use some promising new startup, even if it's more likely to do a great job, the fault is squarely on you if it goes wrong. Similarly, when hiring an engineer, the recruiter and hiring manager can explain away a bad hire to upper management by saying "what a fluke, they have a degree from Harvard!", while they would be in a tougher situation if they made a bad hire and that person had no degree. |
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To be fair the "minimum requirements" are also a risk averse filter.... you can reject everyone without any issue by saying no one meets the minimum