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by michael_mroczka 486 days ago
I love this comment, and as an author of this book, I don't disagree with a word of it.

A common misconception is that Gayle's original book put forth the "right" way to do interviews. Gayle neither invented or encouraged the current interview structure. Gayle discusses the timeline in more depth in a Blind AMA thread you can find online. I think a lot of people are under the impression that books like thes somehow steer the interview process toward this style of interview. At this point, all we are doing is looking at the process as it is TODAY, and trying to help provide transparency and equal information to everyone. We spend several chapters in this book talking about how broken the process is and making similar points to you, but we can't write a book on an interview process that doesn't exist and while Gayle's original book is well-circulated, she (or any of the rest of us authors) doesn't have sway over how big tech companies conduct their hiring.

With that said, I think we are seeing companies start to incorporate other interviews precisely for the reasons you've mentioned. It isn't uncommon for smaller tech companies especially to have a DS&A interview, but also include a system design interview, and maybe even a practical "build something simple like a tic-tac-toe game in front of me while I watch" kind of interview. I do believe things are getting better and more fair over time (remember two decades ago Google was literally asking riddles in an attempt to screen people). I don't buy into the narrative that these interviews should go away entirely (and if they did, it would take at least a decade) because they are still a reasonably effective way to interview people at scale. The Pragmatic Programmer guy actually had a great take on this here: https://x.com/GergelyOrosz/status/1891212829346435103