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I found myself trapped in a downspiraling conversation over the weekend - about interview questions. The engineers involved all represented different points of views and brought very good observations to the table. It mostly boiled down to:

  • Management wants to know that they'll get their money's worth out of a candidate.
  • New engineers don't want to feel like they're being interrogated or shaken down.
  • Old hats don't want to waste their time answering the same puzzle questions they've been through a dozen times before.
  • Hiring engineers need to know - in a very short period of time - if they believe the person they are going to hire can do the job.

This is a very open-ended question. I've left a few bullet points of here that I felt didn't occupy the same level of conviction, but I'm looking for general input: did we leave anything massive out of the conversation? More importantly, how do you (and I'm not using the non-specific 'you' here) address these concerns in designing your own interview process? What questions do you ask, and how you you believe they address the key points of your interviewing requirements?

I've been through the process from both sides a number of times. I've had the 'All Four' experiences: I approved someone that was hired and turned out to be a rock star. I've approved someone that was hired and fizzled. I've given the thumbs-down to rock stars, and cringed as people were hired and turned out to be exactly as bad as I had predicted. While these experiences have sharpened my intuition, I am by no means an expert.

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Not a real question? Not programming related? I have too many options here... – Adam Davis Apr 27 at 18:41
Please check out stackoverflow.com/questions/321618/… – Adam Davis Apr 27 at 18:42
You could also go with "subjective and argumentative"... "I found myself trapped in a downspiraling conversation" doesn't seem to fit a Q&A Format very well. – sth Apr 27 at 18:48
Not to mention it really should be community wiki. – David Thornley Apr 27 at 19:26

closed as not programming related by Adam Davis, gbn, sth, DJ, David Thornley Apr 27 at 19:27

6 Answers

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Here's a quick outline of what I'm looking for:

  1. Is this candidate a competent engineer (ie, can they code at all)?
  2. Does this candidate have the necessary skill set for the job?
  3. Is this candidate capable of learning new things?
  4. Is this candidate's personality a good fit for the organization/team

I wouldn't spend too much time on detailed technical questions past this point. Even if you're talking to a competent engineer with knowledge of the applicable technologies, you'll certainly be able to stump him/her. However, given the capacity to learn, this isn't a problem.

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One of the key things I think you've left out is the fact that generally trivia is incredibly ineffective as a strategy. While getting an idea of how someone thinks and measuring their intellect in this manner is okay, the Joel test for example puts the strain on having them actually write code.

Most of the comments I would have are answered by the immense number of posts about interviews that exist on SO.

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If I want to apply for a job, I will put a lot of effort in it. Even if that means answering questions that I have answered before.

If I have to question new candidates, I like to know if they are good team members. I take some effort to get some interesting questions for them that gives me insight in how they work.

The bottom line, is sometimes you have to do boring stuff, but you can endure it if you want to reach the goal.

Besides, what would you do with one milion ping pong balls? (I would paint them in nice colors and glue them together to get a piece of an DNA molecule. Not usefull, but very high geek factor).

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The "Interview Question" sessions are only part of the window through which the candidate and company view each other. Yes, the bullet points stated are good criteria for hiring, but there are probably a few other points to consider:

  • Is this person the right fit for this job, and if they're not being hired on a short term contract, are they a good long term fit for the company?
  • Will their personality and work style mesh well with the existing team, or if they change the team dynamic, will they change it for the better?
  • What is their long term interest in the company? Will they become a highly productive lifer, or will they jump at the next interesting opportunity outside the company, and leave your investment in them dangling?

Ideally, the candiate is at your company not simply interviewing because they want any job they can get, but because they are interested specifically in what your organization does. They want to work on the coolest projects, be around the best and the brightest people, and Change The World(tm). A simple "why do you want to work here?" can clear this up; if they're specific about projects and show deep knowledge of your company, it's clear they've at least done their research. Anyone who tells me in an interview "I'm tired of being unemployed," instantly gets a negative mark.

Likewise, you should do as much research (as is legally allowed) on a candidate before they walk through the door. What have they worked on? Were those products/teams/companies successful? Have they published anything? Do they have a blog, and if so, is it well written and widely read (and respected)? Do they code in their spare time, and if so, what do they code? Where are their passions, and do you feel your company can provide sufficient motivation to this potential Rock Star to keep them at high levels of productivity for long periods of time?

All this should happen before the interview ever takes place. It's the metaphorical prescreening on Match.com before you sit down for a long dinner and decide whether or not to engage in a long term relationship with this person. You hopefully already know that this person can write good code, cares about their work, is committed and driven; the interview is a chance to look in their eyes and see if their history is accurate or a fabrication. It's also a chance to test out the personality match. A Rock Star who clashes with the team is not a good hire.

So what's the Philosophy of the Interview? It's to answer these questions: Is this candidate who is great on paper who they say they are? Are they as interested and committed to you as you are to them (since you're already spending your time talking to them)? And are they a great fit for the team and the company?

If the answer to all these questions is yes, then the answers to your original questions wil be in the positive as well. If personalities mesh, candidates won't feel shaken down or get bored with old questions, they'll have the guts to say "I've seen this before, and I do/don't like this question, and here's why and how I solve it." Management will know that their prescreen process worked out for this person and yes, they are who they claim to be, and yes, the company gets a high value employee. That's your philosophy, to find great people who are focused, smart, and accomplished, because after that everything else falls into place.

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The questions I'd ask depend on the situation. Interviewing for an intern position will involve different expectations than for the Sr Engineer position.

Generally though, I'd focus on questions that help you determine: adaptability; problem-solving ability (tech perspective); problem-solving ability (personality perspective); theoretical knowledge/background (stuff they should've learned in college); questions specific to place of employment (more appropriate for seasoned devs).

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I only once had an interview where I got "quizzed". It was an Ada job, and after about the third question where I turned it around on them and started to go into detail about when it would and wouldn't be a good question based on language arcania, they quit.

They claimed they were forced into giving the "quiz" because they had so many job applicants that were lying about knowing the language. Ick.

I don't have a ton of experience with giving interviews, but the ones I have done it was fairly quickly clear just by talking to the person how competent they were and how well they would fit in. A quiz could only have muddied things.

Anyway, this seems to be a really hot topic lately, so I'm guessing it is more common today. Anybody out there know why this would be? Perhaps the same reason, more people lying about qualifications, due to the more competitive job market?

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