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some company that I've applied to sent me a "Programmer aptitude assessment" test to take. should I? seems pretty stupid having been in industry for over 15 years..

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What sorts of questions does it ask? – dcrosta Sep 25 at 2:32
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I've known people "in the industry" longer than that with absolutely zero programming skills, unfortunately... – Ryan Duffield Sep 25 at 2:32
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Not programming related. The answer is pretty simple - yes, if you want to have a chance of interviewing with that company; no otherwise. – ChssPly76 Sep 25 at 2:34
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maybe they weed out stodgy old-timers by seeing who will take the test :P If it's an uninteresting test you may not want to work there. – klochner Sep 25 at 2:34
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@silky - brainbench.com is not (at least, highly unlikely) a company OP's applied to; they're the company providing tests. And their tests are reasonably decent, actually. – ChssPly76 Sep 25 at 4:46
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closed as not programming related by ChssPly76, silky, Tom Leys, Mauricio Scheffer, aJ Sep 25 at 2:57

8 Answers

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Of course you should. Companies really don't care how long you've been in the industry. They want to find out what you know and weed you out if you don't have the skills they're looking for.

Take the test, show them what you know, and don't be offended. It's just a company protecting themselves from making a bad investment (time and/or money).

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Yes. This is your chance to knock their socks off by getting everything right.

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It depends on how desperate you are.

  1. Absolutely, tired of ramen - Take the test, spend a lot of time on it. If it's really hard you may be behind when you get hired. Plan on losing more sleep.
  2. A little, would like to take my girl out - Take the test, it's probably worth missing some sleep now for more sleep later.
  3. Mediocre, i mean a job is good, right? - Read it over, if it seems relevant, take it, but don't spend the weekend on it. If you can pass it at your current skill level you'll probably fit in well.
  4. I'm just looking - Test? Don't think of it as a test. Think of it as a statement of the standards, practices, and environment of the company you are going to work for. Remember that the hiring process is also the time for you to decide it's not your kind of place.
  5. I'm bored and like applying - Send the test back with questions and corrections to the specificity and application of the questions to real world scenarios.
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+1 for the Steen scale of desperatiom – APC Sep 25 at 2:58
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Take the assessment. Brainbench tests are notoriously easy, especially the "General Knowledge" ones.

A word of warning though, the technology specific tests focus a lot on knowing keywords and syntax. They allow you to use other sources, but it is timed so you get about 1.5 minutes to answer each question. Have Google and the product documentation handy when you take it.

Some of the more lame questions ask you to spot the line with the bug and they love the old trick of misspelling an infrequently used keyword, doing something so stupid that no one would ever accidentally do in real life and expect you to know exactly what the platform will do in that completely unrealistic scenario.

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Assuming it's a test containing relevant questions...

Give it a go... maybe it'll open the doors to learning something you didn't know or knew but have forgotten. In any case, 30 or 60 min well spent - it'll shine the spotlight on areas you need to focus on.

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i was looking for a senior position not junior...that's why i'm questioning the intent of this test – Tom Sep 25 at 2:42
doesn't matter. If it's trivial for you, you'll ace it. If not, you still learn.. no downsides either way. – Gishu Sep 25 at 4:44
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Why not? Maybe they want junior guys who aren't upset by distracting ideas like writing quality software, but if so, you can always let them pay you until Nicole Kiddman calls to ask you out -- hey wait that's MY exit strategy.

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Yes - it might be a sign it's a good company to work for

There's an interesting chapter in the book 'Sway': http://www.swaybook.com/ that cites research proving that 'normal' interview questions like:

  • 'Where do you see yourself in 5 years?'
  • 'What are your weaknesses'

are completely useless at determining whether someone will be a good fit or good for the job.

Aptitude tests are far more effective. Which kind of makes sense, but we still have a cultural aversion to them because we think we've 'earned' the right not to be tested. If you want the job I'd suggest you look past that - it could be a sign that they are a smart company.

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No. Since you apparently don't want that particular job very much, you should keep looking for a job you do want, and leave that one for someone who needs it (especially with the economy the way it is).

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