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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

vote up 16 vote down

You'll laugh, but I always check out the bathrooms/kitchen first when I show up for an interview. Often it tells you more about the people you're going to work with than the interview itself. If the group you're to be working with can't manage to keep a toilet clean by cleaning up after themselves or can't be bothered to wash their own coffee cup after using it, then it says something about the corporate culture.

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Agreed. Bathroom and kitchen are easy things to keep tidy - much easier than code, so if they are a mess, run far away. – Justicle Jul 3 at 1:01
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vote up 4 vote down

Beeing interviewed by your prospective manager and realizing he doesn't have any technical knowledge dating later than 1995.

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vote up 8 vote down

No source control
Lotus notes (really hate that bit of software)
Staff look miserable and lack of personal stuff on desks etc

They havent purchased the basic tools - One place I worked at was downloading trial versions of software then when they ran out after 30 days would reinstall the entire machine. Stupid, inefficent and cheap. I left under a week.

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vote up 4 vote down

My deal breaker, other than the obvious unsatisfactory work environment; would have to be the expectation of a jack of all trades.

This is common in smaller companies, where a developer might answer a support call unrelated to code he's written, or make a system configuration change, or modify a DB schema, etc..

I guess the same could happen in a larger organization. Rule of thumb, make sure they understand that an agile development process doesn't mean you'll do whatever they want whenever they want.

If you're not careful they could have you mopping the floors. (not that there's anything wrong with that! --Seinfeld)

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vote up 9 vote down

Ask about employee turnover.

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vote up 31 vote down

Free Coffee - You'll never find a more simple indicator of how much management respects its workforce.

Peets delivery service and a good espresso machine? You'll also get dual 21s, a fast machine, and the tools you need to get things done.

Drip machine and cheapo coffee service? You'll get a Single 21" monitor and a re-tasked "server" as your dev box.

Drip machine, little cup for quarters, and "The Honor System"? Single 19" & a cheapo HP box with XP Home. And Visual Studio Express Edition.

Bring your own? Bring your own machine too if you want to get any work done.

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how about access to porn ? all programmers like porn and only some like coffee – 01 Oct 31 '08 at 12:40
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"Non-monitored high speed internet. Office doors that Lock." – Jason Kester Nov 1 '08 at 0:24
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I don't mind if they filter out the porn on a web filter, but it kills me when the blog that is trying to tell me how to get something done is blocked! – Redbeard 0x0A Dec 17 '08 at 23:28
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I have worked with Free Coffee and a Free-20oz-Coke-Machine. These were to make up for the lack of trust - had to clock in/out via hand-scanner, and fill out forms if you were 10 minutes over lunch. – anonymous coward May 14 at 15:14
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vote up 11 vote down

Just look at the office: if they have "Motivators" posted all over the place, then... Oh, yeah, then you're in trouble.

Also, open space environment sucks.

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We have demotivators hung everywhere. :) – Chrisb Aug 27 at 15:36
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vote up 3 vote down

When they move you to another cubicle because you're "talking too much" to the developer in the cubiccle next to you...

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vote up 44 vote down

Wow, I'm surprised at the number of divas that replying. I don't know - as I've matured as a developer/professional, my 'deal breakers' have relaxed a lot. Honestly, I can't believe that people would turn down a good job just because they have to be there on time. Really?

For my last interview, the only thing that I asked was to see their code. That's the one thing that can really make me miserable these days. I can wear collared shirts, get to work on time, do just about anything, but working with bad code is just horrible.

Edit - Also, money can be a deal breaker for me as well. I have a no-go line that I will not drop below. The rest is a series of compromises. If you pay really well, I'll toe the line and wear collared shirts and look smart. But, if you've got cool technology and great people, I'll work for less money. But those aren't deal breakers for me.

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I expect that many of the people here are, by virtue of spending time on a site focused on furthering our understanding and expertise, are passionate enough about their work to demand a conducive work environment. – Echostorm Oct 30 '08 at 12:33
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If a potential job contains one or more deal-breakers, then it is not "a good job" – AndrewR Dec 11 '08 at 10:26
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I agree with your sentiment that bad code is horrible, although I'm not voting up here because I want much more than good code. – Jay Bazuzi Dec 12 '08 at 21:41
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Funny, my maturing process was the opposite - as a young programmer, I was more willing to "toe the line". With experience I've realized that if the most important thing to them is your arrival time, then there are other things wrong too - they need to get over it and focus on whats really important – AviD Mar 6 at 7:04
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@Coconino: If I saw you dressed as Carmen Miranda, that would definitely be a dealbreaker. – mmyers Jun 26 at 21:06
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vote up 4 vote down

Having been lured in on the promise of working with the latest and most interesting technology, one of the interviewers asks me whether I happen to know any VB6 "just in case our legacy LOB app needs supporting..."...

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vote up 7 vote down

If you get a chance to wander round where the "real developers" sit (maybe even on the way in to the interview) - check out what apps are open on their screens, and what books are on their bookshelves.

Warning sign apps are when you see nothing but outlook, excel, word etc open on their desktops.

Warning signs for books are when everyone's desks are covered with the latest "technology stack components in a nutshell" or whatever, yet they are in pristine condition, and do not even have any crease marks in the spine

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vote up 8 vote down

I was being interviewed for a job about 10 years ago:

Interviewer: So, have you ever built a Java Applet?

Me: "No, sorry. I really don't know java. I have read about Applets and have a general idea of what are they for and the basic scenario where you could use them"

Interviewer: Uhm. Ok. But suppose that you had to build one. Could you do it?

Me: Yes, naturally I think I could learn to build java applets, just like any other programming topic.

Interviewer: Could you do it.. say.. right now? I mean, if needed?

Me: I could try.

Interviewer: Perfect. Can you start tomorrow?

It is the only one time I have rejected a job offer. I have met people that have worked there and all of them agree that this place is the worst depressing software sweat-shop.

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vote up 3 vote down
  • when "interfacing with clients" really means "upselling whether they need it or not"
  • when "leading the development team" really means "writing specs and running tests for an outsourced team that I don't get to choose"
  • when "full telecommute" means "100% travel"
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vote up 6 vote down

My deal breakers include:

  • working on commission
  • being on-call
  • any software shop where the sales staff out-number the developers 2-1 or worse (in my experience sales loves to promise the impossible)
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vote up 39 vote down

My top 10 red-flags:

  1. Their programmers are stuck with 17" tube monitors.

  2. Internet access is not allowed or is severely limited. Ex. They think you can do your job just fine with locally-installed msdn help.

  3. Their "data center" is running mostly PCs (ex. running DOS, Windows 95, Windows 2000, OS2, etc..)

  4. Their network is still running on Novell Netware or Windows for Workgroups.

  5. Their core data is FoxPro, Access, Paradox, mainframe extracts, etc.. [and this will likely never change as long as you're alive]

  6. You'll be required to participate in night support [and you're told not worry if you receive your pager before your PC].

  7. They ask you to take a hand-writing recognition analysis test. [yes, I was actually asked to take one of these once]

  8. They ask you to write a bubble sort. [It's not the bubble sort I'd be worried about]

  9. You're fore-warned that you should never install anything on your computer or store anything local because computers are re-imaged on an ad-hoc basis.

  10. A perk of the job is a new FranklinCovey with free re-fills every year. Worse - the dev mgr or lead architect interviewing you is toting one around.

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vote up -7 vote down

If they are half competent they will be able to bullshit through a lot of the valid tests people have raised. A great sly one is to ask about what your personal dev environment and box. The attitude to providing a productive environment says a lot about their real attitude to developers.

  • New mac pro == good, unknown second hand box == bad.
  • Whatever OS you want == good, SOE Win2K == bad.
  • Choice of IDE == good, tools budget == great!
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vote up 16 vote down

I've learned the hard way that technical questions that are dead easy are usually a sign of company full of people who wouldn't be able to answer harder questions.

So when you get technical questions ask yourself if you want to work with a group of people where these questions represent the minimum technical ability level.

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I learned this the hard way. I found out about a year later that the (ridiculously easy) quiz I took at my interview had "stumped" a number of the senior devs. – Greg D May 10 at 19:51
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vote up 25 vote down

I walked out of an interview once after 20 minutes when it became clear that their core hours were 9.30am-4.30pm and "they would be flexible about doctor's appointment". It didn't look like the sort of place I could wear shorts to work either...

Now that I am an employer, both of my employees frequently get in at 11ish, one because they work late, the other because they go and do sports in the morning. So long as they are here for meetings and get the work done, why should I care?

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+1 - that is a great attitude! – Optimal Solutions Oct 28 '08 at 23:31
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erm, what the hell is wrong with 9:30-4:30? That's at least an hour less than most jobs. I wouldn't expect more flexibility unless it was a software house. – Draemon Nov 14 '08 at 18:08
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wanted more flexibility, and had no trouble getting it. I don't want most jobs - one will do. And yes, it was a software house. – Airsource Ltd Nov 18 '08 at 17:07
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dude i work 8:30 to 6, you guys have it made – Shawn Dec 9 '08 at 19:53
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For everyone that misunderstood, 9:30 - 4:30 are the core hours, hours you HAVE to be there not the total work hours. You can work 7:30-4:30, 8-5, 9-6, 9:30-6:30 (all with an 1 hour lunch), as long as you are there at 9:30am and still there at 4:30 pm. At my workplace, core hours are 9-4 and I usually work 8-5. – Alan Jackson May 26 at 14:52
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vote up 8 vote down

If I become seriously interested in the position, I always ask, "Do you like your job? Are you planning on staying here?" Watch for a quick flash of expression across their face, and watch their body language carefully while they try to answer the question.

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vote up 45 vote down

I walked out of a lucrative prospect one time because their NCA (Non Compete Agreement) read like it was written from Karl Marx or something like that.

Also, ANYTHING (and I mean any little or large or in-between thing) that I developed on, say, a Saturday afternoon was THEIR property. Talk about lame. I asked them, "If I am doing a science project with my kid after dinner and we create some pretty nifty gadget for him to show at the Fair - you own that?". The immediate answer was "yes". I shook their hands and said good-bye. It was then that I decided to go it alone (self-employment) and vowed never to do that to people who were hired to help me. Never tie their hands.

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100% agree. This is arguably the most important thing for me (even though, in my answer, it was the #2 bullet point). :-P +1 – Chris Jester-Young Oct 28 '08 at 21:42
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Next time ask them "If i'm experimenting with virus programs at home and one of them gets loose and erases the Library of Congress, you'll pay for all the damages?" – Steven A. Lowe Oct 29 '08 at 1:58
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Oh, but the first week come in with an 3 meter tall display on the human plumbing system and ask them where they want it stored.... – sammyo Jan 6 at 18:23
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"I make animal fetish porn videos - should I put the company name on the copyright?" – mgb Jan 7 at 15:18
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vote up 48 vote down

"No, the recruiter got that wrong, we don't do much Java, you'll be writing Tcl."

"Wow that's a long way to come for an interview. Sorry, the recruiter got that wrong, we don't refund interview expenses."

"Wow, that's a long way to come. Didn't the recruiter tell you, this is just a chat? If we're interested we'll get you back in on Tuesday."

"We don't use third-party code here, not even the standard Java API. We wrote our own String class, it's more efficient."

"What version control do we use? Visual SourceSafe."

"We normally work until about 7 or 8pm, but on Saturdays we finish at lunchtime."

"You'll be on-call out-of-hours Monday to Friday."

"All developers spend some of their time doing telephone support."

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@Rolf: It was beyond commuting distance, it would have required relocation. They offered to pay for the travel when they invited me to an interview (I did not ask for it). They then they failed to deliver on their promise. If they hadn't had offered, it wouldn't have been so bad. – Dan Dyer Feb 6 at 21:00
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"All developers spend some of their time doing telephone support." Actually that's a recommandation of 37signals... I guess it depends how it's done. – e-satis Jul 3 at 16:13
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vote up 29 vote down

If they do web development but outsourced their own corporate site.

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vote up 36 vote down

The interviewer cannot or will not tell you how you will be evaluated and how you qualify for raises.

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vote up 17 vote down

Making you work solely from a laptop with no monitor.
(About every large Consultancy that I've ever seen does this.)

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vote up 49 vote down

The Joel Test is great, but (yes, but) in some cases early on in your career you need to experience things. Poor management, fumbling through bad code, learning from your mistakes are all things that the perfect job should have early in your career. Am I advocating sacrilege? Yep. Having done this very thing myself, I can honestly say you'll learn more and work smarter, not harder once you have.

I worked at a lowly web development company where the "desks" were kitchen counter tops bolted to a wall and our space was about 2 feet in either direction from the other station. I worked for peanuts, but you know what? I learned PHP, MySQL, XHTML and CSS in the year and a half I worked there and I also learned why source control was important, because we never had any and when you lose 8 hours of work to Joe-saves-over-me you start to wonder.

From there I worked at another start up company out in the middle of nowhere and was paid exceptionally well for my level of expertise. They had source control, and everyone there was great to work with. I learned that everything I learned could be improved, and I learned a bunch of new skills. Then I learned the next valuable lesson, which I had started to learn at my last position: Management is key. You need to be managed.

Now I work in what you call the "red tape bureaucracy" and will likely never go back, until I start my own horribly disorganized start up. Oh sure, the service oriented architecture and SOX compliance might get to you at first, but you have to remember that you are learning. Learn everything you can. Learn how you want to work, and how you hate working.

Be open and honest with the hiring manager. Otherwise, you're likely to end up somewhere you won't enjoy. As far as red flags? Go for your gut feeling, and the Joel Test. Just don't devalue the experience of working through problems. After all, in our profession, problems are why we have jobs in the first place.

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Sometimes the only thing you learn from a shitty job is that you have a shitty job. – James McMahon Jan 6 at 20:27
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vote up 11 vote down

Worked at a place with no vacation time. Said we'd "work it out later". Stupid of me, took it (of necessity). 2nd day there they asked me to sign something that said

a) If you ever look at non-company stuff from your work computer you can be fired (this is a small, dev shop, 6-7 developers only, not a financial).

b) If there's ever ANY legal dispute with the company, you agree in advance that you'll pay all the companies legal fees.

I started looking that day.

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Refused first, then when they insisted, signed and started looking. A few weeks later they asked another applicant his entire medical and educational history. Not current, but his entire life. He stormed out and almost got violent with the interviewer. – Steve B. Dec 23 '08 at 22:04
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As he should since that's illegal – jmucchiello Feb 15 at 21:12
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vote up 185 vote down

The Joel Test and Field work in non-IT specialised organisations

For a software company or an in-house development shop the Joel Test (as various other posters have discussed) is quite a good start. However, as a contractor one tends to find oneself working in companies that are really not geared to develop software (otherwise why would they need to hire contractors?). Since I've been working in London I don't think I've seen a company that would rate more than 3 or 4 on this scale. Usually they can get specifications, source control (even if it's just VSS) and someone to do testing. Sometimes they have a bug tracking system.

In this situation, the actual project environment is quite sub-optimal and often has other political obstacles to getting work done. Data warehousing and B.I. projects are particularly vulnerable to these issues as they are dependent on interfaces to other systems, which in turn have their own politics. You can't really do a data warehouse project without having to stick fingers in pies, so these politics are more or less unavoidable.

Typically, there is also an incumbent and poorly documented back office with their own manual procedures, politics and vested interests (often referred to as 'Gatekeepers' in data warehousing literature). There may also have been one or more unsuccessful attempts to produce a coherent MIS platform, so one tends to start out having to carry a burden of proof. The back office staff may or may not view the project as a threat.

Management's commitment to the project and making it work is a key factor in project viability and can be a make or break issue. In my experience management is really a weak link - project sponsors have to be prepared to back the project when it needs the business to pull its weight and line management need to be prepared to act as a two-way channel. I tend to be wary of signs of managmement that look like they aren't pulling their weight. Poor commitment from project sponsors, inadequate resourcing and evidence of a sleazy or self-serving management structure raise big warning flags.

Warning signs - some positions and interviews I've walked away from (or wished I had):

  • Interviewer comes across as sleazy. This is a gut feeling or 'vibe' thing. At one point I went for an interview at a large consultancy and got the distinct impression that they were more interested in upselling than anything else. Sleaze is a big one for me - I find it quite offensive.

  • Interviews that consist exclusively of trivia questions or where the interviewer appears to be trying to prove they're cleverer than you. You don't want line management that is in the habit of trying to run you down. It also suggests some insecurity which can manifest itself in all sorts of negative ways. In the worst case it shows management looking up interview questions without really having the depth to do a competent technical interview. In a contracting role this is not necessarily an issue as they may genuinely need to bring in expertise that they do not have locally. However, an unwillingness to admit this or run the interview on an honest basis is also a warning flag. I also tend to view excessively structured interviews as a warning sign of someone who wants to simplify the decision down to tick boxes without taking responsibility for making a thoughtful evaluation of the candidates.

  • Positions where the employer is offering less than a market rate. At best this is a clear signal that your management (at some level) is not giving the role the support it needs. If the manager can't or won't sign off (or get signed off) a market rate for the role, what other support will be lacking?

    At worst it is a sign that someone in management is always trying to pay less than the market for what they are getting. People like this are self-centered and will always try things on - give them an inch and they will take a mile. They will also not pull their weight when you need support for something.

    Lack of management support to resolve issues not directly under the control of your project is a key driver of project failure, wasted time and unresolved issues that hang around and cause friction. As these will be issues on your project you will be viewed as responsible for them by default. This is the sort of situation where unsupportive line management with a 'you should just make do' attitude can do real damage to the project - and potentially your career.

  • Signs of micromanagement, self-serving management or excessive focus on minutae of performance. This is a signature of a direct report who is in the habit of reporting ticks in boxes to their management and proclaiming how wonderful they are for delivering everything on time and on-budget. Micromanagement of this sort is a bad habit in software project managers. It generates artificial work stress, disrupts flow and is always a drain on morale.

    Also, it allows the management to fob off the project risk to development staff, setting you up for meaningless 'failure to deliver' evaluations, which the manager now has an incentive to give in order to cover their own arse. This makes it a personal career risk to be involved in this sort of environment. For obvious reasons, all estimates will get padded in this sort of environment and Parkinsons Law law will apply - which means this type of management is a net drain on throughput.

    Finally it is also indicative of middle management who are not willing to stick their neck out to manage expectations with the business. This will erode credibility. This and the first two points are bellwethers of endemic CYA culture that may be running at unhealthy levels.

  • Support jobs dressed up as development. Hedge Funds are particularly bad for this. Also, anything billed as '50% development, 50% support'. This should be mentally translated to: 100% support and a development workload that won't get done because of all the interruptions. This type of job is unpleasant and sets you up as a convenient scapegoat for missed development objectives. Combined Deveoper/DBA jobs are prone to this sort of failure mode.

  • 'Polyanna' overly positive hiring managers. Overly positive people who continually make claims like 'we don't have that kind of problem here' can be an indicator of middle management who won't acknowledge issues or won't manage upwards. It can also be an indicator of control freak tendencies - this type of personality tends to try and control information flow and present a rosy outward appearance. Finally, it can also be an indicator that the interviewer is misrepresenting the role or circumstances.

For a contractor, where (to some extent) you're only as good as your last job, career risk is actually a significant issue. As an example I've seen a situation where an ostensibly plum job at a company remained open at increasingly OTT contract rates because of the reputation that company had within the market. Previously I had been hired by the then incumbent in that job, who had been with them for 8 years until the company was acquired. He subsequently left, largely due to the rather septic internal merger-and-acquisition politics, and his replacement lasted for just a few months before he also left. In the meantime I had left as well. After that the position was such an obvious poison chalice that they couldn't fill it, even offering something like 50% over the market rate.

Joel Test for a typical London Insurance firm:

  1. Do you use source control?
    Usually they do have source control, typically VSS (better than nothing although some say that's a matter of opinion ;-) On one occasion I've seen CVS used for a Java project.

  2. Can you make a build in one step?
    Usually not geared for this (at least not on B.I. systems). However, I have seen C.M, C.I. and scripted builds on one occasion and introduced them on a couple of others.

  3. Do you make daily builds?
    I have seen this on one occasion but usually they don't do this sort of thing.

  4. Do you have a bug database?
    I have seen this on two occasions, but usually informal spreadsheets are the norm.

  5. Do you fix bugs before writing new code?
    I've never seen this done in practice.

  6. Do you have an up-to-date schedule?
    Most would say they do, but in practice schedules tend to be more for show than anything else.

  7. Do you have a spec?
    Finance companies doing any U.S. business basically have to have a spec document for Sarbox controls. This might not have been the case a few years ago.

  8. Do programmers have quiet working conditions?
    Never. Always in open-plan offices.

  9. Do you use the best tools money can buy?
    Software tooling tends to be OK but fairly conservative. Hardware for resource-intensive development work such as a data warehouse project will often be lacking and correcting the shortcomings often takes months and backing from high-level project sponsors. On a number of occasions I've also seen software tooling - even basic stuff like Visual Studio - take months to arrive. For this reason I also maintain my own development lab.

  10. Do you have testers?
    Often but not always.

  11. Do new candidates write code during their interview?
    I've never seen this happen in practice, but the jobs I do tend to sit somewhere between development and consultancy so coding is only a part of the job.

  12. Do you do hallway usability testing?
    When I have business reps with good buy-in something similar happens on occasion but it's far from the norm.

EDIT: Involvement in the support of what you've built, particularly in the early phases of roll-out can be quite instructive for a developer (as bernard-dy says). However, a mixed development/support role where you are on-call for general support issues (as is typically the case in a role described as 'Developer/DBA') has fundamental conflicting requirements within the role. This sort of environment is also frustrating and unpleasant to work in.

Doing any non-trivial development job requires concentration and support work is reactive with an implicit demand of 'drop everything'. This context switching is very toxic to anything that requires concentration and it will be the development work that suffers. In a role of this sort the immediate priority is always on the support but delivery deadlines for development are far more convenient judge performance by. The typical trap here is to be expected to drop the development work in favour of the support work but later find performance being evaluated on development deliverables (i.e. performance assessment is out of sync with the real work priorities).

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+1 for '50% development, 50% support' comment – Even Mien Oct 30 '08 at 21:10
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+1 for positions offering les than market rate: they never, ever, ever meet the post-probation promises they make – annakata Dec 9 '08 at 21:10
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I've learned to discount heavily promises of what I will be doing in the future. If you're not doing what you thought you'd be doing in a few months, there's a problem. – David Thornley Dec 11 '08 at 15:09
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50% support doesn't mean dogfooding it means the phone ringing every 10mins with some manager that can't be bothered to read a manual. – mgb Jan 7 at 15:15
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Spot on regarding management support. The open-plan culture in Britain is ubiquitous, not even cubicles, no surprise we've got hordes of misirable workers taking time off because on stress-related grounds. – Totophil Apr 9 at 14:17
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vote up 17 vote down
  • Visual SourceSafe. Never again I say, never!
  • Having to be at work at a specific time in the morning (like 8:30)
  • Anything that sounds like "we really want to implement [practice that good developers do] but we're real busy right now"; this means they're a code-it-now-fix-it-later shop

I'd put lack of unit testing on there, but honestly in my last job search I found that only 40% of the places I interviewed did unit testing. Which is pretty sad really but there you are.

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vote up 6 vote down

i recently had an interview with a BIG company and I figured that they would be at the cutting edge of technology, the following had my spidey senses going

  • no definite answer on their QA process
  • no definite answer on code review
  • unit test - at times
  • sharing code amongst teams - maybe
  • no answer on their source control project
  • as far as CI goes, they said depending on time and project
  • they asked me a lot about GAC even though they do not use the GAC to place their assemblies
  • they did not hear of subsonic, nhibernate, nservicebus,add-inn framework etc even though they do a lot of back end stuff and things with .net 3.5
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vote up 23 vote down

Here is a list I recently compiled (mostly for myself, but I am sure a few aspects will be shared by others).

A list of things to keep in mind on the next interview.

  • Ask to see a portfolio, if not available online
  • Ask to see some of the code of the best/lead developer, this will be the best expectation
  • Ask to see the version control log and unit test log, dont fall for ‘yes, we have/do that’
  • Ask that the best/lead developer be present at the interview
  • Make sure the best/lead developer is better than you, else you will be doing his job
  • Ask to see some run of the mill code, any random snippet
  • Ask them to be very precise on the responsibilities of the applied position, make them contractual
  • Ask to look at their DB structures
  • Ask to see architectural and design documentation

Once done with the above list, and you are happy, proceed with a normal interview, else say “thanks, but not interested”.

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Most companies are going to be reluctant to share all that without an NDA. If I ask "which VCS do you use" and they say "Subversion", I'll take their word for it. Some interviewers maybe deceptive but I've never come across outright lying. If they did lie, I'd be straight out of there on day one. – Dan Dyer Oct 28 '08 at 20:03
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That's not to say I disagree with your basic advice. You always have to keep in mind that you are interviewing them as much as they are interviewing you. – Dan Dyer Oct 28 '08 at 20:04
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If offered the job, ask to work there for a day, for you to see if you fit in. I've done this a couple of times, not only does it help you make a decision, it really seals the deal with the employer in that they realize how much you care about picking the right job. – Jason Oct 29 '08 at 3:36

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