|
|
|
|
|
by vidarh
4174 days ago
|
|
> They're not going to acquire you for $2M plus give you an additional $200k vesting RSUs per year. If that is the case the hypothetical offer (that never was) starts approaching insultingly deceptive given the way they went about it. If I started talking to someone about an acqui-hire and they expect to get a "discount" on salary and options/RSUs based on the acquisition price, then the acquisition price is artificially inflated to get my interest unless the hinted at acquisition amount makes the salary and RSUs a rounding error (in which case they'd be idiots to potentially antagonise a desirable hire over it). And I'd be tempted to tell them to fuck off just on principle. Of course Google is not obliged to make him a good offer. But they ought to realise the damage these kind of approaches are doing to their brand amongst potential hires. For my part, while I've never experienced anything like in this article from Google, my experiences with (half a dozen plus) Google recruiters have been entirely negative whenever they've approached me, to the point where I recount my history with past Google recruiters every time a new one calls to make it clear to them why I am going to be short with them until/unless they prove they're worth my time. No other company's has been as disrespectful of my time. > Point being, there's nothing scammy about a deal being negotiated down But there is plenty scammy about not making it clear that they are trying to hire him but instead giving the impression they are after his product. |
|