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by lapcat
1097 days ago
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> Though I'd say it's a fairly different mental experience than coding at an interview. This is the key. Not all pressure is the same. Shit on fire at work is not actually personal pressure, it's pressure on the company. And to be clear, shit on fire at work tends to be a metaphorical exaggeration, where an emergency code patch isn't going to save the company from imminent bankruptcy. You're still going to have a job the next day, still going to have a roof over your head and food on the table. And your coworkers already know you and respect your work (if you're competent). This is vastly different from being unemployed, suffering from profound financial worries about your future, and having complete strangers looking over your shoulder, prematurely judging you in the span of a few minutes, where these few minutes can determine your personal fate. I've done quite a few emergency fixes over my career, but exactly zero of them were lose-the-job emergencies. Whereas every job interview is a lose-the-job emergency. |
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I keep myself in the interviewing loop at my company because I actually enjoyed the process when I joined. It was conversations over “executable” solutions. Now, we kick out so many candidates that can’t get a coded, running solution in the 45 minute slot.
I have tried so many times to explain the WILD asymmetry going on. That for us, we just have to interview the next candidate. To them, they have the enormous pressure of “if I can’t do this exercise then I have no income, no health insurance, no security.”
That’s unfair.