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What can come up in an interview or job posting that should set off the alarm bells for a coder?

I'm still only a few years in the industry but I already know to look out for excessive red tape and bureaucracy. Cubes and a noisy office also tell me that I'll be both miserable and unproductive and that management does not appreciate what coders need to work well.

Edit: The way things are going I'm taking extra time to look at the company's stability. If they depend on a single vendor for their livelihood and could be out of business if the vendor decides they don't really need the service or can do it in-house.

What are your dealbreakers?

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81 Answers

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vote up 12 vote down

Required travel would be a deal breaker. (Since I have a family.) Not to mention that getting thrown into the client's home turf when things are broken is pretty nerve-wracking. Especially when what's broken is back at the office but you get to sit there in front of the client on the phone (or not) while your co-workers post on StackOverflow and go to lunch, etc.

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vote up 143 vote down

For me, the biggest deal-breaker in a development job is the requirement to be on-call.

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On-call is bad, but what it says about the company is that either: a) they aren't willing to hire/train/retain qualified tech support staff OR b) that inter-departmental communication is so poor that tech support staff doesn't have enough information to support the tech Both are bid red flags. – Robert Gowland Oct 28 '08 at 15:53
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As long as they pay you to be on call and there's some sanity to the rota. Once you tell them that calmly and as nicely as possible, they don't usually ask you again. – Robert Paulson Oct 29 '08 at 2:53
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vote up 5 vote down

First, what breaks the deal for me may be the one thing that gives you an easy, peaceful feeling. I like change, disruption and reorganization. I like forging ahead with not usable internal support organization. That's me. If you like stability, read no further.

Caveat 1: I've been a contractor for 30 years, and had over hundred positions -- and almost as many interviews. This may not fit your idea of a good way to work/live.

Caveat 2: When all jobs are temporary, nothing is a deal-breaker.

With that warning, here's what I don't like.

The interviewer is your prospective manager -- not an HR person -- but they lecture you for 20 minutes on the ins and outs of the project, the politics and the technology choices.

After 20 minutes of listening to them talking, they follow up with "do you think you can do this?"

Nothing good comes of the above.

The answer is always "yes" because the question is merely rhetorical. All future conversations will be like this -- all their questions will be rhetorical -- your job is to guess what they've already decided.

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vote up 12 vote down

Noisy and Cubes is not necessarily a bad thing. It can sometimes mean that you're working in an energized interactive environment.

It comes down to the sort of environment that suits your style. I like working on a team in close proximity to others. My best programming experience was in a room with 4 others with no walls, a conference table in the middle and a huge whiteboard nearby (as well as whiteboards at each desk). It was incredibly collaborative, creative and productive.

Those 4 years created a valuable foundation for the rest of my career.

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I think there might be a difference between having a team huddled together in what sounds like a nice environment and coders next to the telemarketing drones. – Echostorm Oct 28 '08 at 12:47
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vote up 77 vote down

"We use a modified waterfall workflow methodology."

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Which translates into "those above you piss on you regularly". – Paul Tomblin Oct 28 '08 at 13:41
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Is there any other kind? – devmode Dec 9 '08 at 20:19
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Many good answers - I'd add checking out the dev to tester ratio - 5D:1T or lower being good, IMO.

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vote up 1 vote down

If the interviewer is curled up in a ball in the corner, mumbling 'death march'

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  1. You get an instruction by the employer to be formally dressed for the interview
  2. All those that are interviewing you are not programmers (or dont have a background in it).
  3. They tell you that you need to be in the office everyday at 8 AM.
  4. You cannot own a laptop because you cannot take code home for security reasons.
  5. They tell you that you will interact with testing/documentation people once every quarter.
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vote up 29 vote down
  • Lack of integrity in the boss
  • Dysfunctional teams, especially if you can tell during the interview
  • No time to learn or explore
  • No mentors (unless that's why you're being hired)
  • Unwillingness to invest in technology
  • Draconian process or no process, both are bad IMHO

[EDIT] A normal work-week of more than 40 hours

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vote up 46 vote down

Lotus Notes. This is by far the worst email program I've ever used.

The way I look at it is... if they can't put a decent tool in place for something simple like email, what are the chances that your development tools are going to be any good?

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I shared your answer w/ a coworker because we have had bad experience with Notes. He reminded me of the steaming pile that is Oracle Collaboration Suite. Hooboy, vhat a stinkah. At least Notes works, though it's a pain. – jj33 Oct 28 '08 at 13:15
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@Pax: I maintain that the only people I've ever met who talk notes up are people who directly make money fixing it (Notes devs, contractors who specialize in notes dev't). I've never met a normal user who used it for anything (including non-email uses) that liked it. – Greg D Jul 24 at 11:51
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vote up 70 vote down

A big red flag for me is if I get the feeling that I'm walking into a situation where I'm going to be the best dev in the shop, unless I'm going in knowing that I'm going to be the lead. If they're wallowing in mediocrity, I'm likely going to be miserable.

Also, if my spidey sense tells me that they know a lot of buzzwords but don't actually know a lot, I'm running for the hills.

If they code by the seat of their pants, that's trouble.

I can zone out noisy work areas (I wear my headset a lot) so that typically isn't an issue.

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From your first three points it sounds like you're the one interviewing them. This is exactly the attitude to take. – Bill the Lizard Nov 28 '08 at 21:57
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vote up 57 vote down

This is the bitter voice of experience talking. ;-)

  • When the interviewer does not seem happy with his job
  • When the interviewer does not give you firm assurance that you'll be doing what you want to do ("We also have some REXX programming that we do..." means you'll be a REXX programmer)
  • When the company doesn't keep their systems up to date ("We still use Windows 2000 and .NET 1.1")
  • When the company is not financially healthy
  • When management doesn't understand software development or doesn't see the benefit in good SCM practices

And, the aforementioned Joel Test... But failure of the Joel test isn't as much of a dealbreaker as if the company is not open enough to want to succeed at it.

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That is true. It's one thing if they started with a 0-2 on the Joel Test and now they are a 4-5 and working on getting better. That's a good thing, and if you have experience in one of the lacking areas, you might be an asset. – Thomas Owens Oct 28 '08 at 12:05
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vote up 9 vote down

The deal breaker for me is when i look at the books in the office and there is nothing but programming books.

For me personally I like to see a good mix of books on the business of software development, efficient development process etc. It tells me that there is at least someone there who want to understand the end to end process.

I've worked in several companies where I've had to initiate development processes etc. that i now want to see that the foundations, of sorts, is already there.

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vote up 114 vote down

"You'll be able to work in <insert fun language here> really soon but just for a couple of weeks you'll have to maintain our MUMPS/COBOL/VB4 application..."

"Unit testing - yeah, we've heard of that. Sounds exciting. Have you done any?"

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I'm always tempted to take a job like this and try to be a hero for introducing new technology to the company. Then I wake up from my daydream... – Bill the Lizard Oct 28 '08 at 12:05
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If an employer even says the word MUMPS, run. You won't regret it. – Tim Stewart Oct 28 '08 at 12:12
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Yeah, lookout for a job for <fun language> where they ask you lots about your experience with <dull language> too – David Kemp Oct 28 '08 at 17:09
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Ahhh, MUMPS I remember that. Any language named after a disease that makes men sterile has to be fun to work with... (!) – Chris Huang-Leaver Nov 27 '08 at 10:39
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What's FAR worse is when I mentioned unit testing at an interview for a bank, the reply was "No. We don't have time to do that." I was offered the job but turned it down. At least if they say it sounds interesting, you have a better chance of converting them.. – IainMH Dec 11 '08 at 13:24
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vote up 13 vote down

Lack of process and documentation, when they say "Yes we're implementing that." tends to really mean "We know we should be doing that but aren't at the moment".

If you enjoy pouring through hundreds of lines of code just trying to work out how things work, spending hours to make relatively simple changes, relying on the patchy knowledge trapped in the heads of your co-workers don't let this put you off in the slightest.

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vote up 2 vote down

I would apply the Joel Test. Scoring poorly on it, with the possible exceptions of 9 (I don't need the best tools, but I do need good tools) and 12 (hallway usability testing might not be appropriate for all projects), might mean that it isn't the best working environment (and therefore possibly not the best job).

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vote up 49 vote down

I'm about to start a 90 day contract-to-perm job where they have a dress code, and you're not allowed to have anything personal on your desk except one photograph of your family. I'm pretty sure it's going to suck.

Update: Well, the rumours about the "nothing personal" were wrong, there were things I liked about it and things which sucked, but they ended my contract before I could find something else, and that really sucks.

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Pfft, I can't see why they'd derive any benefit from allowing you to be happy in your work environment. In fact, I don't think they should even give you a desk, they should make you sit outside in the cold. – Ant Oct 28 '08 at 12:21
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I'd strongly suggest putting a picture of a Domokun on your desk and claim wholeheartedly that it was a family member. – Abyss Knight Oct 28 '08 at 16:11
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Congratulations! You now have 90 days to find a better job. – Steven A. Lowe Oct 29 '08 at 1:52
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vote up 131 vote down

You might want to have a look at The Joel Test, an article Joel Spolsky wrote a few years back giving coders a 12 step guide to evaluating a prospective employer.

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vote up 42 vote down
  • No source control
  • No centralised bug tracking or project management
  • Performance measures SLOC / Check Ins
  • VB6
  • VBA
  • Access databases
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-1 for language snobbery – Lance Roberts Oct 28 '08 at 18:57
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+1 for VB6/VBA. My Arrays always have a size thanks very much. – scunliffe Nov 2 '08 at 15:09
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+++++++1 for Access databases! - Try doing a full outer join... – Redbeard 0x0A Dec 17 '08 at 23:21
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Access is a step up from excel :-) – Einstein Jan 8 at 15:36
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vote up 14 vote down

Actually, the opposite. Not enough process, no source control etc.

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vote up 128 vote down
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The second bullet is a big deal for me. I refused to sign the HR agreement form that said this at my last place of employment. I didn't make a big deal of it, just never did it. :-) – T.E.D. Oct 28 '08 at 14:23
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People certainly think that they're not allowed any say in a boilerplate contract, which couldn't be further from the truth. Cross out any sections you don't like and initial them. HR types may need to take a breather, but if you have a reasoned argument they'll usually give in. If not, then leave. – Robert Paulson Oct 29 '08 at 2:48
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Also, just because those clauses are in a contract, does not mean that they are enforceable. Further, it doesn't mean that the company would waste its money trying to pursue it. But yes, I agree, it makes me cringe when I see the 'I own you' clause. – Travis Dec 15 '08 at 6:21
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Whether they're enforceable could ultimately depend on what a judge says. Given how out there some judges can be, I'd rather not sign something just because I think it's unenforceable. – Kyralessa Dec 24 '08 at 16:41
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Just because clauses are unenforceable doesn't mean you can't wind up in court over them. It's better to not be in court than to win in court. – David Thornley Jan 19 at 18:38
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