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Root826004yAlways ask the hard questions.
Ask the ones that are hard for them to answer, and especially the ones that are hard for you to ask. -
Root826004y@AmyShackles
I am tired as hell, so this isn’t a great list at all, but here are some off the top of my head.
• Is the company profitable?
• When will it be / what is the plan to make it profitable?
• How do you (or the company) handle conflicts?
• How does the company pay off technical debt?
• I have a feature I want to write in a certain way because of architecture/scalability concerns, but management refuses to listen and wants a quick hack. Who do I talk to about this? Which will I end up writing?
• Who makes the architectural/feature decisions, and are they open to discussion?
• Who makes scheduling (deadline) decisions?
• Do you do code reviews, have CI, staging environments, redundancy?
• Does someone keep management and HR out of the devs’ hair?
• What is the meeting policy? Do you have excessive or pointless meetings?
• What is the average workday like? How about sprint?
• How many people regularly work overtime?
• Is slack/jabber/irc/chat/zoom informal? Does anyone feel like they have friends here?
• Are there personality conflicts? How are they handled/mitigated?
• Are you happy with the quality of the code/project?
• Are you happy here?
• Has anyone in your department gotten a raise in recent memory?
• If you could change something about the company, what would it be? How about codebase/infrastructure? -
@orimligt A good question that I will feel more comfortable answering once I know how the next stages of the process shakes out. XD
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Received the news that they’re not moving forward, so...
Response had been that their reservations were that they felt like I felt the need to prove that I knew what I was talking about and that I had a deeper knowledge about React than they’d expect from someone at my career level and they were concerned about how that would translate to a work environment. -
penless304y@AmyShackles concerned that you know a stack in-depth and how it would translate in good work ?
what kind of bullshit answer is that ? -
@penless ¯\_(γ)_/¯ I also thought that interviews were specifically opportunities to prove you knew things. It’s one of those few times where I was left thinking, “Maybe it’s ‘cuz I’m a chick?”
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inhamul874y@penless yeah what the hell is that, I mean don't some companies expect you to have a deep knowledge of a stack. I think it's utter bullshit, @AmyShackles good you missed a bullet, these are red flags.
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JhonDoe28184y@AmyShackles "I had a deeper knowledge about React than they’d expect from someone at my career level and they were concerned about how that would translate to a work environment", don't sweat it my friend, this just mean that they were expecting someone with less knowledge to be paid with pennies.
Anyways I hope you land in a good job π -
@AmyShackles Sounds like the "heu! We wanted a noob/beginner, so you're overqualified; bye" type of rejections. If so, then seems like you dodged a bullet.
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I had the nerve to ask “Do you have any reservations about hiring me?” during an interview today. No regrets. Recommend.
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