I admit I did not listen the whole thing and after somebody said that
he does lunch interviews I turned it off. I just don't understand what
kind of insensitive monster would do that. why? a person (or a thing
that you might hire) might be under a lot of stress. what is the best
way to make him more miserable? why not go for a lunch with someone
who might decide your future? you enjoy eating with strangers when you
are stressed? I don't, you don't care.
Like you guys were sentence to hire people and all other people at your
companies are too stupid to do it, so you have to do it. I'm sorry
that you can't fire them.
after somebody said that he does lunch interviews I turned it off. I just don't understand what
kind of insensitive monster would do that. why? a person (or a thing
that you might hire) might be under a lot of stress. what is the best
way to make him more miserable? why not go for a lunch with someone
who might decide your future? you enjoy eating with strangers when you
are stressed? I don't, you don't care.
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This might be part of the problem. An interview is *not* for interviewer and candidate to learn from each other. If you go in with this expectation, you will be disappointed. The people who interview are not here to teach you anything, they are trying to recruit the next member of the team they spend forty hours a week working with. It's a big deal and they need to make sure they are not hiring the wrong person, because such a mistake will have an impact on both their professional and personal lives (working with people you don't like or don't respect will have a negative impact on your mood when you come home at night).That's their only goal.Your only goal should be to impress them. That's it. Not trying to learn from them, not trying to teach them anything, just answer their questions the best you can.
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maybe I have overreacted, but I just met so many idiots that do job
interviews that it was hard to hear those smartass remarks made in the
podcast.
hmm, that seems unprofessional to not hire somebody, because you are
not meant to be best buddies. however its good to know that being shy
is a blemish. I do work with a lot of people I have never spoke about
anything else then work (not everybody works from same location) and
it does not hurt our ability to work together. just saying. I thought
I take hiring personal, but you just took it to next level.
On 16 Lis, 18:47, Cédric Beust ♔ <ced...@beust.com> wrote:
I think in the podcast I heard one of the question being "what
technology was used and why". the "why" is very tricky since most
likely you were not there were those decisions were made and have to
improvise. what to tell when you really hate some technology that was
used? the best way is probably to lie. I would lie if I did not know
the answer. why did we use just jsp and servlets? because its
standard, its well tested and reliable. you just cannot trust those
new and fancy web frameworks. (the last sentence must not be the
best, but it will work for any other framework.)
On 16 Lis, 18:47, Cédric Beust ♔ <ced...@beust.com> wrote:
plus you cannot expect person to be the same at work as he's on a
interview. I'm not, I even shave for interviews!
On 17 Lis, 18:42, Robert Casto <casto.rob...@gmail.com> wrote:
> People forget that they will probably spend as much, or even more, time
> with the "team" than they will with their spouse. It is very important that
> there is a good fit because otherwise, everyone will feel tense or
> irritated and that can make the work experience less than ideal.
>
he should know a lot more than me or at least as much as me.
Probably not, but if you don't try, then you are basing a decision on nothing. And it is hard to hide things from lots of eyes. My favorite job was after 6 hours of interviewing with a total of 12 people.
As a side note, I just want to mention that this is a public forum and potential employers do search the Internet.