| I recently drove 3 hours to a technical interview. I had done plenty of screening, including screenshare while I wrote code to the guy's delight. He invited me down for the technical interview. I came down a week later. His wife had just delivered a baby, so he was out. The guys in the room were a business level ex-marine who was there for god knows why, and a technical dude who clearly was pissed he had to sink to the level of doing the interview in the first place. For the first 45 minutes, I aced everything he threw at me, and I noticed that he wouldn't drill in on anything that I clearly knew very well. He kept jumping from topic to topic, and eventually asked to do an extremely tricky SQL query, but write the code to do it in awk on the whiteboard. The job posting said nothing about awk, and I told him I didn't know awk that well. He then sensed i wasn't a command line master (the job posting said nothing about needing to be a fucking sysadmin or know advanced CL stuff) and hammered me on things that I had already said I didn't know. 2 things became clear: He wanted to show off to his boss and make himself look like a badass while simultaneously making me look incompetent. There was no fucking way I was going to accept a job working here if it was offered. I didn't so much as get a phone call or an email to thank me for driving 6 hours round trip. Nothing. Which screams out to me that this company sucked. |
After I left, I also did not get so much as a phone call or e-mail. Neither thank you nor followup. When I attempted to re-establish contact, it was like shouting into a black hole.
The feedback I received on site from the interviewers was neutral to positive, with one interviewer claiming that I was the only applicant to come up with the correct response to their abstract brainteaser.
If I take two whole days off from my existing job to come to you and indulge you in your cute little skill tests intended to prove my bona fides, you ought to have the decency to follow up.
So you're not the only person to be on the receiving end of this unacceptable behavior from interviewing companies.