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model_tar_gz@lemmy.world āØ1ā© āØmonthā© ago

Iā€™ve rejected someone on their 4th round beforeā€”1st round with me. That candidate had managed to convince the recruiter that they had the chops for a staff engineer (>$200k/yr!) and passed two coding rounds before mine, testing knowledge of relevant techs on our stackā€”at this level of role, you have to know this coming in; table stakes.

I was giving the systems design round. Asked them to design something that was on their resumeā€”they couldnā€™t. Theyā€™d grossly misrepresented their role/involvement in that project and since they were interviewing for a staff level role, high-level design is going to be a big part of it and will impact the product and development team in significant ways. No doubt theyā€™d been involved in implementing, and can codeā€”but it was very clear that they didnā€™t understand the design decisions that were made and I had no confidence that they would contribute positively in our team.

Sucks for them to be rejected, but one criteria we look for is someone who will be honest when they donā€™t knowā€”and we do push to find the frontiers of their knowledge. We even instruct them to just say it when they donā€™t know and we can problem-solve together. But a lot of people have too much ego to accept that, but we donā€™t have time for people like that on the team either.

Look, I get what youā€™re saying and clearly Iā€™ve been on the wrong end of it too, but if we make a bad hiring decision, it costs not just the candidate their job but also the team and company they work on can get into a bad place too. What would you do in that situation? Just hire them anyway and risk the livelihood of everyone else on the team? Thatā€™s a non-starter; try to see a bigger picture.

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