TE
TechEcho
Home24h TopNewestBestAskShowJobs
GitHubTwitter
Home

TechEcho

A tech news platform built with Next.js, providing global tech news and discussions.

GitHubTwitter

Home

HomeNewestBestAskShowJobs

Resources

HackerNews APIOriginal HackerNewsNext.js

© 2025 TechEcho. All rights reserved.

Ask HN: Frustrated by “Years of Exp.” Question After Resume–Am I Overreacting?

2 pointsby abyesilyurtover 1 year ago
I was recently approached by a startup founder for a Senior Flutter Engineer role via email. I expressed interest and shared my resume with them. My resume shows that I have been in the industry since 2017.<p>The next email asks &quot;How many years of experience do you have working with Flutter only?&quot;. Doesn’t the question show that the founder knows absolutely nothing about software development. I am furious at this question. Am I over-reacting?<p>I find this metric to be severely outdated and not reflective of software development skills at all for reasons such as the non-linear nature of skill acquisition and the rate at which technology evolves. Especially for a newer framework like Flutter.

3 comments

joezydecoover 1 year ago
Because he&#x27;s seen a ton of resumes that say Flutter experience, and when he digs in he sees that people have written a Hello World or tinkered with a few example pieces of code in a senior class project. Or they watched a Google I&#x2F;O presentation on YouTube.<p>Asking how many years you&#x27;ve actually spent with a framework is a valid question, and you&#x27;re going to get it again. So look inward. Do you really have 6 years of actual experience shipping apps with it? Or is it 2 or 3? Maybe one? <i>Have you shipped at all</i>?<p>And if you <i>have</i> shipped a Flutter app, pivot the conversation to that instead. Point out what you did. And then it doesn&#x27;t matter how many years you did (or didn&#x27;t) spend on it because you&#x27;re giving the the interviewer what he is looking for. What&#x27;s that Spolsky tag line? <i>Smart and Gets Things Done(tm)</i>
syndicatedjellyover 1 year ago
It&#x27;s reasonable to ask, because they can already tell that you have 6 years of general software experience. Maybe they need someone who has shipped products in a particular framework. I&#x27;m sure you would agree that there is a difference between someone who has 6 months of experience doing something, versus 3 years and versus 10 years. Would you hire a musician who has 6 months of experience playing an instrument and just hope that they can learn enough to play professionally, on your dime? If they don&#x27;t happen to pan out, it&#x27;s the hiring manager&#x27;s ass on the line (and in this case the entire company)<p>Apply, hope for the best, and move on if it doesn&#x27;t work out.
eschneiderover 1 year ago
Don&#x27;t take it personally. A lot of companies (and especially a lot of startups) don&#x27;t have a lot of experience hiring&#x2F;managing people and is sorta shows.