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Ask HN: What matters for getting back-end positions?

2 pointsby eanthyover 5 years ago
I've had many interviews throughout the years with many fails/passes. What I noticed is that the only thing that matters is how you do on the tech part, which is usually a Hackerank style question. It seems that how you approach/solve that question is about 90% of the interview and everything such as experiene/hr part/personal projects barely matter. The question is does having a good git portfolio of projects or personal website or overall experience matter/helps you get interviews/jobs or is it only like 1% improvement?

3 comments

onion2kover 5 years ago
<i>What I noticed is that the only thing that matters is how you do on the tech part...</i><p>Tech skills are obviously important, but whenever I&#x27;ve interviewed people the &quot;candidate is not a psycho&quot; checks are equally, if not more, important. You can be the most technically skilled person in the world but you&#x27;re probably in a list of candidates who can all do the job, so that&#x27;s rarely a major differentiator once you&#x27;re actually at the interview stage. Conversely, if you don&#x27;t seem to be a nice person who I&#x27;d be happy to have in my team you&#x27;re not getting hired.<p>Consequently a personal website or a portfolio that shows off the fact you&#x27;re actually a decent person is really useful. Mentioning things like hobbies or volunteering gives the interviewer a great starting point to find out more about your personality - that&#x27;s what makes a lot of people shine in my opinion.
noname120over 5 years ago
Experience and personal projects get you past the screening process, interviews get you past the hiring process.<p>Most companies aren&#x27;t looking for personalized interview processes in order to assess a candidate&#x27;s fit. They&#x27;re looking for standard, comparable interview processes where they can justify their decision and hold interviewers accountable. It&#x27;s easy to compare two Hackerrank scores, harder to (objectively) compare personal projects.<p>Hackerrank-style interviews suck and they aren&#x27;t representative (not even remotely) of real working conditions. But they are good at something: evaluating the tenacity and the drive of a candidate. You need to work hard to ace these interviews, and companies are looking for candidates who are persistent and able to work hard—even on things they don&#x27;t choose to work on.
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hans1729over 5 years ago
Afaik (not a personaler, I&#x27;m a consultant mostly working backend-jobs): experience is important, personal website&#x2F;git portfolio is not, at all. Recruiters are not techies, they can&#x27;t be arsed going through your github, and if they did, they wouldn&#x27;t understand a thing.<p>Once you get invited, you need to perform vis a vis; if you don&#x27;t get invited, you didn&#x27;t meet the criteria.<p>The criteria vary by employer and position, but are mostly:<p>* is your code good enough?<p>* are you someone the team can work with?<p>When you get declined, ask for specific feedback. What went wrong? What can you improve on? Etc.
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