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It's a Weird Time in Tech Hiring

2 pointsby andrewstetsenkoabout 1 month ago
Talented engineers apply to dozens of jobs and never hear back.<p>Hiring managers post openings and get flooded with unqualified applications.<p>It feels broken on both sides.<p>Why is this happening?<p>Here are a few things, but there are more:<p>1. Too many candidates, too few roles<p>Post-layoffs, the market is flooded — especially with mid- and senior-level engineers — making competition intense and hiring teams overwhelmed.<p>2. Applying is too easy<p>One-click applies and AI-written resumes mean companies get swamped with low-quality or irrelevant applications.<p>3. Job ads are now part of global competition<p>Hiring is no longer local — job ads attract applicants from all over the world, raising the volume but making it harder to identify the best local or relocation-ready talent.<p>So how do we fix it? Feel free to add your own recipes.<p>1. Improve your online presence<p>Make sure your LinkedIn and resume clearly reflect your skills, role, and value — don’t make hiring teams guess.<p>Write a tech blog, join podcasts, solve HackerRank challenges, contribute to open source — anything that helps show your expertise beyond just a job title.<p>2. Use referrals (even weak ones)<p>Even a loose connection can help you bypass the noise and get your profile seen.<p>3. Build your network before you need it<p>Stay active, share your work, and connect with people — opportunities often come from conversations, not applications.<p>With everything happening in the tech hiring lately - how are you navigating it all?

5 comments

sleepyguyabout 1 month ago
The market has been flooded with H1B Employees and their spouses. Few opportunities for everyone, from college grads to veteran tech talent.<p>Companies are choosing cheap contract H1B labor. Some companies find that too expensive, and open their own shops in India where employees earn a fraction of what a US-based employee would earn for incredibly long working hours.<p>The transportation industry leaders are a great example of that.
999900000999about 1 month ago
Wages have taken a noise dive.<p>Whoppie de da, I can get an &quot;VP&quot; position that pays 130k in New York!<p>I&#x27;m so ready to cash out one of my retirement accounts and try to hide in a cheaper country until things get better.<p>Google is spamming LinkedIn with roles, in Poland. Guess they got tired of paying 300k TC to Americans.<p>I&#x27;m lucky with a fairly decent remote job, at least for the time being. I missed my chance to get a FAANG job and retire by young.<p>Now I&#x27;m in my 30s. Old and bitter. Gone are the dreams of raising a VC round and making millions of dollars. If I ever do come up with something, I&#x27;ll just bootstrap it.<p>I don&#x27;t want a board of directors telling me what to do.<p>I have a very unique idea for project management of all things and I reckon I could build it for 50k or so.
Uzmanaliabout 1 month ago
I was laid off from a startup last year and sent out 187 applications over two months. Zero interviews. It was demoralizing until I changed how I approached job hunting. I started sharing small projects, coding tips, and lessons on LinkedIn and GitHub, and people started reaching out. Then I started talking to old coworkers, joined tech groups, and helped with open source. Most interviews came from these chats, not job boards. I moved from being just another resume to being a known and helpful human, even if only to 5–10 people. That was enough.<p>The system may be broken, but you can still stand out by being real, relevant, and visible. It worked for me; I hope it helps someone else, too.
PaulHouleabout 1 month ago
Your advice is perennial, I would have given it to people any time after 2005 or so when blogs, LinkedIn and things like that have been entrenched. People sung the praises of &quot;networking&quot; before then, at least since the 1990s.
jcadamabout 1 month ago
I was recently laid off from a startup and I&#x27;ve never seen the job market this dead. And I was unemployed for a few months back in 2008.