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Agreed

The main issue for me is that I find it ridiculous to go to N teleconference interviews and then get turned down in person. I'm sure it's for some stupid reason like "all of our team like sports and you don't seem quite enthusiastic about it"

They push for you to "be honest" but that's only an excuse for turning you down. Give them the answers they want to hear and you'll be fine. Also the pressure of the moment is important.

(Also I would like to see their faces when my MBP's Facetime wouldn't connect - talk about a reliable software... not)



Every interviewer wants you to let the guard down and show them the real you. We know the version of you that comes to our interview will be copacetic, genial, nice, friendly, etc. by default. Our biggest task in most of these interviews isn't necessarily ascertaining whether you can develop software -- hopefully that's borne out of some pretty straightforward questioning.

The real task is to figure out what you're really like after the interview facade goes down, and being able to envision you as part of the team.

It's a reason there's so much thought and discussion these days on ways to effectively anonymize people during job searches and interviews, I think. An interviewer / hiring manager needs to be very aware of their own feelings and mindset when making a decision to ensure the "seeing you" part of the decision process is done consciously and purposefully.


Yeah, however they probably overestimate their evaluation capability, the bias of the moment (candidate might be nervous, etc) and underestimate their capacity of letting the candidate go if it's not a good fit (especially in countries like the US)




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