I am a creative, passionate, full stack web developer. I love technology! Currently I'm really into Node & React but I am very experienced in PHP, Drupal 8, accessibility, CI/CD #WomenWhoCode
Thanks so much Val! Yes I've been looking in London and honestly I'm finding the process tiring, even as someone with plenty of experience and great references so I cannot imagine how it must be for less experienced developers now. I think that some people just see it as moaning, but the fact that it's really hurting diversity and causing people to even quit the industry means that something really needs to be done.
I feel like a good interview should test your skills but leaving you feeling positive, whatever the outcome. It's really great to hear that there are people out there like you trying to change the process. The fact that you're giving the person the choice to pair or work alone too is brilliant, pairing can be really intimidating in an interview situation!
I haven't been in hiring for awhile now (I contract freelance), but I never really focused on interview tests. Before I'd get a candidate to come in I asked them to send me to a Github repo or some code they were particularly proud of writing. I could tell a lot from reviewing that code than I could by watching them fumble through ridiculous whiteboard tests.
I felt it was much more important to find out who the person was and if they would fit into the team. Any good FE developer can learn your process or code the way your team codes. Perhaps this process only worked for the small 30 or so person businesses I was working for, but I never had a bad hire so I think that must count for something.
I love this, and, as a potential candidate I'd apply to this company only because of the interview style. Yeah, I do random stuff sometimes (that's how I got my first job)
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Thanks so much Val! Yes I've been looking in London and honestly I'm finding the process tiring, even as someone with plenty of experience and great references so I cannot imagine how it must be for less experienced developers now. I think that some people just see it as moaning, but the fact that it's really hurting diversity and causing people to even quit the industry means that something really needs to be done.
I feel like a good interview should test your skills but leaving you feeling positive, whatever the outcome. It's really great to hear that there are people out there like you trying to change the process. The fact that you're giving the person the choice to pair or work alone too is brilliant, pairing can be really intimidating in an interview situation!
I haven't been in hiring for awhile now (I contract freelance), but I never really focused on interview tests. Before I'd get a candidate to come in I asked them to send me to a Github repo or some code they were particularly proud of writing. I could tell a lot from reviewing that code than I could by watching them fumble through ridiculous whiteboard tests.
I felt it was much more important to find out who the person was and if they would fit into the team. Any good FE developer can learn your process or code the way your team codes. Perhaps this process only worked for the small 30 or so person businesses I was working for, but I never had a bad hire so I think that must count for something.
I love this, and, as a potential candidate I'd apply to this company only because of the interview style. Yeah, I do random stuff sometimes (that's how I got my first job)