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by PaulHoule
1681 days ago
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I think most people make stupid mistakes in job interviews and thus interview below their level. If you fix that you practically interview way above your level. I bought the course this guy was selling 15 years ago https://job-interview-answers.com/ which changed my viewpoint. Also I am good at leetcode questions and highly educated and experienced. Even when I don't know the answer I manage to salvage the situation anyway (They asked me what "regularization" was in a data science interview, I had no idea, they told me, and then I told them all the ways I had done regularization.) I say "there is no question in a data science interview that can't be answered by (1) look it up in the hashtable or (2) look it up in the literature." I can make that work for me, but I am not sure how to make it work for you. Now if I could only pick up girls as well as I do job interviews... |
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I do something similar whenever I'm unfamiliar with a term like that in an interview.
First, I never bullshit. I'm VERY upfront about not knowing a thing - but like you I say, "can you define that term for me -- perhaps I know it by another name" and more often than not, yeah, I can talk about how I've been doing it or something similar to it. And if not I get to have a discussion about the term and learn something, at least.
(Tangentially, being upfront about not knowing a thing gives you more authority when you state that you do know a thing...)
This field changes so quickly, I don't think any interviewer ever expects you to know more than a % of the topics broached, but they do expect you to be able to converse reasonably about all of them IMO.