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What is a good non-programming question to ask a candidate during a job interview?

I'll post my two favorites below, but I'd like to hear others.

Clarification: By "non-programming," I mean you are not asking them to solve a problem by writing or describing code.

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haha awesome, i'd +1 that comment if i could – Kip Jan 30 '09 at 13:53
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Not programming related, needs to be closed. Hey! Don't blame me SO has a double standard. – Kelly French Jul 30 '09 at 18:50
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oh quit moaning, your wasting space. (to the "please close" people not the OP) – Jonathan. Jun 2 '10 at 12:06
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closed as not constructive by Jeremy Banks, templatetypedef, Tim Post Sep 21 '11 at 3:37

This question is not a good fit to our Q&A format. We expect answers to generally involve facts, references, or specific expertise; this question will likely solicit opinion, debate, arguments, polling, or extended discussion. See the FAQ.

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I think it's important to ask at least one really generic question to give them a bit of space to breath and speak freely. Through this you can find out quite a bit out about them! Oh yes and make them talk about other hobbies and how they got "into" programming! Did they do it before University? What are they most proud of? (programming-wise)

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In an industry where some say fifty percent of what you know is obsolete in five years, what do you do to stay current?

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this is good but many companies use such ancient stuff that they don't actually care haha. – Arthur Thomas Dec 5 '08 at 23:19
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What are you passionate about?

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I'm sorry... "What are you passionate about", this question is so over used and tired now, garbage-men are getting asked this question during interviews... but hey, I'm glad it still works for you. – ceretullis Oct 10 '08 at 1:20
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The problem with this question is that enough people would feel obligated to invent something. I think that many very qualified developers, as they get older, lose passion and become practical (family and mortgage would do that to you). Not being passionate doesn't mean anything in most positions. – Uri Jan 28 '09 at 22:15
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Try "What bothers you the most when reading code written by someone else." You can gauge their passion from the answer. Worked for me. – pi. Mar 10 '09 at 13:30
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Why did you leave your previous job?

(Or "why do you want to leave?", if they are currently employed.)

As an interviewer, I want to get at the story behind the resume. If I see someone who has hopped around from job to job, I want to figure out why. The most common explanation is that the candidate talks a good enough game to get hired, but is a poor employee - either not very competent or has other issues (hard to get along with, poor attitude, bad work habits). If they don't fit that profile, then I want to figure that out.

On the other end of a spectrum, if someone has been in a previous job for a long time that is usually a good sign, but not always - it could be that they were in a seriously dysfunctional organization and were good at playing politics, or worked for an employer that was very slow to clear out dead wood.

Unless you are such a superstar employer (via pay, prestige, or both) that you can lure good people away from your competition, your best shot at making really good developer hires is to snap up talented people who have been let go through no fault of their own (usually due to a business failure, takeover or big reorganization), or who are looking to make a big career transition. The tricky part is separating these few precious kernels of wheat from the oceans of chaff.

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What would you consider a good answer for someone who is currently employed? – tloach Oct 1 '08 at 14:34
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How are you supposed to answer when you boss is crazy? A long time ago I ended up working for a crazy woman. I ended up being the 3rd person in a row to quit on her but no one reviews how many people SHE drove away. If I say 'my last boss was a #&$^&$' red flags are raised even though I am right. – Dining Philanderer Nov 11 '08 at 17:33
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Describe to me (a particular project) you worked on.

Preferably it is a project you're not familiar with already. If the interviewee can't describe the project to you, (s)he will likely not be very good at communicating ideas to co-workers, management, or customers.

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What was the last technical book you read?

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Similarly, what is the least technical book you've read. Perhaps even more telling than the last technical book they've read :-) – LKM Nov 10 '08 at 12:05
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How much code do you write in your spare time?

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I find this question to be a bit irrelevant and prejudicial. Sure, when you're in your 20s and unmarried you have plenty of time to hack around on the side. As you get older and have kids, you just don't have that kind of spare time any more. – 17 of 26 Oct 1 '08 at 14:15
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when interviewing the younger ones like me, its extremely relevant - a degree says nothing of your programming skills (and it doesn't mean we have no life). – Dustin Getz Oct 26 '08 at 16:06
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Ask them "Do you know what a 'kickback' is?", then wink a couple of times. ;)

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I like your thinking.... – CJM Oct 1 '08 at 14:07
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You have a bowl with 200 fish in it. Of these fish 99% are not guppies. How many fish should you remove so that 2% of what remains are guppies. Show your work.

This is about confusing requirements. It is said this way to change perspectives multiple times during the same question. It is meant to see if they can figure out what is really going on.

You would be surprised how many people get it wrong.

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Thought about it again. I erroneously assumed that 1 or 2 of the non-guppies could be something other than guppies. But then they would be contained in the 99% of non-guppies anyway. Well, I obviously failed that question. – Thorsten79 Oct 1 '08 at 15:00
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The question is imprecise - it doesn't say that exactly 99% of them non-guppies. But that's a reasonable interpretation. Also, I don't know what a guppy looks like, so I couldn't remove 100 non-guppies anyway. I suggest removing all the fish, to be on the safe side: 2% of zip is zip :-) – Steve Jessop Oct 1 '08 at 15:26
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The spec says that 99% are not guppies. It doesn't say whether the other 1% are guppies. You might have bowl where 99% are not guppies and the other 1% are also not guppies. As an analogy for real world problems it is an excellent test of the trap of assumptions. – Bob Probst Oct 6 '08 at 19:45
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Its so hard to care about that kind of questions, i hate people that ask it. I always feel that interviewer is showing how smart he is, he should find a job where he can use his mad math skills. – IAdapter Oct 29 '08 at 10:35
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-1 This is an awful interview question. It's one of those questions that is specifically designed to trip up as many people as possible. It's nothing more than a brainteaser. – Ashley Henderson Feb 10 '10 at 8:00
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Since we're so often stereo-typed as socially awkward, uncommunicative loners, I ask questions about their hobbies & interests - can all they do is code, or do they have 'a life'?

I also ask more general business questions... do they have a feel for the business of their customers/clients/users?

Good coders are two-a-penny. Good developers who can communicate with, understand and empathise with their clients are somewhat less abundant.

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I've got a couple from my experience of doing team-building

What are your career plans for the next couple of years?
Tells about the things that are important to the developer. Helping him out with these things could motivate him beyond what salary could do.

How often do you make mistakes?
Ability to learn is proportional to the amount of mistakes made and learned from.

How would you approach the task of... [put some new tech thingie that he clearly does not know, i.e.: add circuit breaker for our DAL]
Developer's flow of thoughts will tell, how he normally would deal with new problem, if challenged with one (development is about unexpected challenges after all).

There is no best answer here. Some tend to ask about time they have and the other task constraints (showing management qualities of team-leader), some ask for tech details (good specialists) and some tend to surprise by going straight to the point and showing more knowledge and experience than you would expect (must-hire-now)

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Do you read The Daily WTF?

Have you ever had your work published there?

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Do you know www.stackoverflow.com?

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surely knowing about stack overflow is a sure sign they will spend all thier time procrastinating on it? – Omar Kooheji Oct 1 '08 at 16:59
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How would describe the difference between a Hub, a Switch, and a Router to your Grandmother? If they do OK there, then ask them to describe the difference to me.

The idea of the question is to understand if they can communicate/relate things well and then ultimately if they have a decent notion of these very common devices.

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A hub is like a party line where everyone hears what everyone else is saying. A switch is like a direct line someone else in your town, and only the two of you can hear each other. A router is kind of like a switch, but it also knows how to make your call go to other towns. Am I hired? – Kirk Strauser Oct 7 '08 at 18:03
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I always ask a very similar question for programmers. How would you explain a database to a sixth grader. (Not only do I want to see if they can come up with a good analogy but also can they do so at the appropriate level -- you'd be surprised how many explain it like they are talking to a 4 year old.) – Goblyn27 May 28 '09 at 22:25
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Describe the most challenging situation you have had with a customer and how did you resolve the situation?

(or choose 'co-worker' or 'class partner' if you choose)

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When you run into a coding challenge that you cannot solve, where do you go for help? Where do you do ongoing watercooler style research for programming projects you are involved with?

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In interviews I always get "Why are you looking to leave your current job?" I usually just say something along the lines of "I want more responsibility and I am looking for better opportunities". I never say anything negative about my current job.

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A good interviewer won't let that slide, though. My follow-up would be "What sort of responsibility were you looking for? What had you done to get it, or were you just hoping for a promotion? Had you talked to your boss? Did he turn you down? Why? What opportunity specifically are you looking for?" – Andy Lester Oct 1 '08 at 14:34
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Thanks for saying that, @bryanpearson. I just happen to be writing a book on job hunting for geeks called "Land The Tech Job You Love", at theworkinggeek.com, so it's sort of a pet topic. :-) – Andy Lester Oct 1 '08 at 21:45
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  1. What books would you recommend for your colleagues?
  2. What do you do to keep your body and mind in shape?
  3. How much time do you spend on reflecting on other peoples work?
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What's the most interesting project you've ever worked on? If they remember their past projects, they're more likely to remember their future projects. The better their memory, the better they'll be at maintaining their code (fewer 'why did I do THAT' statements). Plus, you'll get an idea about how passionate they are about coding: do they immediately start telling you about project x, or do they stare at you like you're speaking Greek?

What do you do in your free time? People who code in their free time are more likely to code well, but that's just based on personal experience, I can't back it up.

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My all-time favorite questions are ones that allow me to assess how the applicant approaches solving a problem. (This is somewhat of a variation on Joel's Guerilla Guide "Impossible Question") It gives me insight into how they think (big-picture vs. detail oriented) and what resources they would use to find information they need. Typically I use variation on the following

Tell me how you would determine: - how many gas stations are needed in a 1-square mile area of downtown L.A. - how many ATMs you would place in the 3 largest Las Vegas casinos. - the fastest 5 routes from Point A to Point B.

My variation on this is to tell them up front there is no wrong answer to the question. And along the way, I ask some clarifying questions to give me more information, based on their responses. I found I get more useful information about how the person approaches problem solving, their perspective of new problems they face, and how they go about learning things needed to get the job done.

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I guess the answer might involve some sort of programming response, but:

Give an example of a time when you messed up. What did you learn from that?

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I believe the developer aside from being able to code has to be:

  1. Communicable
  2. Responsible
  3. A team player

Therefore I ask questions around those qualities. For example it's great to see how they talk about their previous job. Who is responsible for that project which did not go that well. How they describe the process of the software development. Etc

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What else is their job going to entail? Try to consider some of the soft, social skills that their role might require (or might one day require) - working as part of the team, helping marketing describe the product, deal with supporting customer, demonstrating with the business development team, team lead, mentoring, handling an HR issue.

My favourite one is actually "why are you leaving your current job? why are you here for this one?" You can lead that on to all manner of other places, and you get a decent grip of the morals, ethics and outlook of the candidate.

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What sort of computer setup do you run at home? OS, distro, networking setup, etc.

Most geeks are happy to describe their systems, and it tells me a lot about their enthusiasm for computers and their technical know-how.

Bonus points for multiple computers, PVR, SAN, security (wifi), etc. (Not just because it's cool, but because this experience is relevant to most programming jobs.)

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Tell me about a time when did something wrong. After they give the example, ask how they went about fixing the problem and what they learned from it.

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Is there a question I should have asked you, but did not?

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What websites/blogs do you read on a regular basis. When have you disagreed with a point the blogger was making and why?

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What was the last programming language you learned? How did this compare to language X?

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Ask if they are familiar with the "coding couch"

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What gets you excited about coming to work in the morning, and what makes you dread coming to work in the morning.

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