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by hn_throwaway_99
1208 days ago
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> But we have examples where the companies themselves have admitted that their past interview practices turned out not to work: https://business.time.com/2012/10/23/no-brainer-brainteaser-... That's pretty much exactly my point. In the 90s, wide-scale hiring for software engineers was a relatively new thing - many companies were just figuring it out. And so they did some shit pretty early on that didn't make sense. But for all the times I hear folks pulling out the "Why are manhole covers round?" and "How many cars are there in Manhattan?" examples, I haven't heard these types of brainteaser questions being used for nearly 2 decades. I'm not arguing that the FAANGs have some perfect, unassailable interview process that can never be improved, but I am arguing that so often I hear grumbling discontent from people who don't like the interview process, but rarely do I see much examination around why those particular hiring processes appear to work fairly well for the likes of Google, Apple, etc. |
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Yes, they did move away from it, but that doesn't mean we aren't now in the grip of equally bad fads.
> but rarely do I see much examination around why those particular hiring processes appear to work fairly well for the likes of Google, Apple, etc.
You assume they work well, but you don't have any data to support that. That's sort of assumption is basically where these hiring fads come from.