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Ask HN: Are there any software companies that hire people without a gauntlet?

21 点作者 freework将近 9 年前
When I first graduated from college in 2006, it was extremely easy for me to get a job. Maybe the economy was really good back then? I remember finding a place I wanted to work for, sent them a resume, they called me and basically told me to &quot;come on down&quot;.<p>Now-a-days that practice seems to be completely gone. Now it seems no one will hire you unless you go through multiple rounds of interviews and compete with other applicants.<p>Are there any companies in existence that simply just hire whoever wants to work there? I know if a company hires this way it is likely that there may be some people on the team who don&#x27;t pull much weight I&#x27;m OK with this. I am very bad at interviewing, so any job that doesn&#x27;t do interviewing is a job that I want to pursue.<p>I&#x27;m thinking maybe a company that has a really bad reputation? Or a job that is very dangerous? Does anybody have any ideas? I don&#x27;t care about what technologies that company may work with. I can learn any technology.

6 条评论

patio11将近 9 年前
A lot of &quot;boring BigCo&quot; (think banks, insurance companies, etc as opposed to AppAmaGooBookSoft) are essentially indifferent to technical ability, because it is not the primary determinant of success at working in their organization. This also describes the overwhelming majority of government technical work.<p>That said, I might counsel either a) getting good at interviewing or b) getting good at avoiding interviewing by pre-qualifying yourself to hiring managers. My rationale for this is pretty simple: the best jobs in software (project selection, monetary rewards, stability of company, desirable working conditions, coworkers who can find their way out of a paper bag, etc) typically lie after an interviewing process. Given that this is true, and that you&#x27;ll spend +&#x2F;- 1,000 hours working for every hour you spend interviewing, optimizing for your interviewing experience doesn&#x27;t sound like it is in your long-term interests.
soham将近 9 年前
In an ideal world, I&#x27;d say do not join a company that doesn&#x27;t challenge you. If you are not challenged in an interview, that&#x27;s a tell-tale sign, that the work is going to be boring and talent mediocre.<p>But given that the world isn&#x27;t ideal, there are times when we just want a job - it seems you are in such a situation?<p>In that case, I&#x27;d say start with people who know you and your work. They are likely to recommend you, leading to an easier evaluation.<p>If you are doing this without anyone&#x27;s recommendation, then start with companies that are not core tech companies. e.g. Hospitals, academic institutions, cheap dev shops and firms whose needs are just a bit more than IT. Their gauntlet is usually lighter weight.
lj3将近 9 年前
Look for a company that&#x27;s rapidly expanding. They&#x27;ll be the ones who just got 10+ million in funding for the first time. It&#x27;s hard to be rigorous about hiring practices when you&#x27;re looking to hire 300-600 new employees in a single year.<p>I wouldn&#x27;t suggest that unless you&#x27;re desperate for a job and&#x2F;or experience. You&#x27;ll get tons of work experience you may not have gotten at a more stable company, but that&#x27;s offset by the chaos you&#x27;ll see on a day to day basis.
merb将近 9 年前
<p><pre><code> I don&#x27;t care about what technologies that company may work with. I can learn any technology. </code></pre> pretty naive.
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alex_ixd将近 9 年前
I would recommend giving them an excuse to not put you through the gauntlet.<p>I got pretty tired of the boilerplate technical recruiter questions, so I created a public github repo and starred it so that it is super visible for anyone who wants to vet my skills (or lack thereof).<p>Having a strong professional network is also incredibly useful. When you are 1 hop away from the hiring manager, you&#x27;ll move faster.<p>With those two pieces in place, you&#x27;ve answered the fundamental questions of &#x27;do you know what we need you to do?&#x27; and &#x27;are you a reliable human?&#x27;.
edoceo将近 9 年前
If I don&#x27;t have some minimum requirements for candidates how would I be able to identify the right fit?<p>I&#x27;m in an industry that lots of people want to be in. We get lots of applications. Some filtering must be done. The basic interview is one filter.<p>The wrong candidate affects my company. That means it affects my employees too (most?). A critical part of the filter is to determine if applicant who WANTS to be here will fuck things up for the people I NEED to be here.<p>Its not just about you.
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