If you're a hiring manager, have you felt the burn trying to find and attract people to full-time roles? And if so, what are you seeing?<p>Sourcing has become near impossible with most candidates bombarded by recruiters, so even as hiring manager, your message is likely being ignored. Inbound applications are down and convincing experienced folks to switch jobs has become harder than ever.<p>The pandemic has also made moonlighting more universal and more people looking for remote/part-time/fractional work.<p>I wonder if anyone else is noticing this too. On the flip side, I wonder how folks looking for full-time roles are faring.
If the interview process weren't so exhausting, then it'd probably be easier to get people to switch jobs. Getting a ton of emails lately, but have zero desire to grind leetcode, do take home tests, and interview with 6+ people when I already have a job.
I would say no, it is just a candidate driven market right now.<p>I work in an office with a load of recruiters and Candidates are basically turning down interviews for many reasons but these are the primary reasons:<p>- Interview process longer than 2 stages
- Interview processes that contain silly code tests / spec work / whiteboarding
- Seeing technologies they "don't like" in a JD and might have to deal with
- Requirement to be in an office
- 100% work at home (some like the flexibility of working at home and office)
- Top Salary (Seriously - some of the requests are ridiculous)
- Company reputation, seeing this more and more, if there are bad reviews on Glassdoor - then plenty of other companies to look at!<p>Short and tall of it is - either make it an attractive place to work or you are not going to find the top talent you require right now.
> If you are hiring manager, have you felt the burn…<p>Hiring Managers are part of the problem-<p>They are largely divorced from the process of identifying, assessing, and attracting talented individuals.<p>Instead, they delegate that task to feckless, disinterested HR flunkies. (That’s HR’s job, isn’t it?)<p>More Hiring Managers need to get out in front of the recruitment process—- actually find and engage in conversation with potential hires.
my job hunt seemed pretty typical -- brutal.<p>i looked hardcore for 4 months - for contract or perm, preferably contract. and casually-ish for 2-4 months before that.<p>turned down one contract (red flag situation), turned down one perm (job was eh, but proved to be another red flag situation), accepted second perm offer because i was completely burned out.<p>hard to put numbers on it all because i didn't track it -- but i talked to prob 150 companies/recruiters/agencies, sent at least hundreds if not 1,500+ resumes -- maybe 5k, who knows -- many with legit cover letters.<p>etc. etc.<p>i've never believed in the industry "we can't find people!" line, and i've seen nothing change - either over the years, or this past year, or past few/couple months.<p>the industry can't find people to work for free? yeah - that i am willing to believe.
I sometimes get bored and see some interesting postings on linkedIn.<p>I try to apply where I'll be redirected either to their homegrown site or some random recruitment site in which I need to create account and fill myriads of forms before applying.<p>I might do it if I'm in dire need of a job, otherwise no thanks. Companies needs to make it easier to apply for jobs.
For me, someone that left the SF/NYC grind during the pandemic and don't want to return, I'm not looking at anything non-remote or mostly remote.
I recently accepted a job two months ago but when I was interviewing it was a complete disaster from my perspective.<p>The worst were companies that were hiring frontend developers (what I specialize in) but during the interview process they ask questions about the backend or creating microservices (Qs more advanced than basic crud/pagination stuff). Like the only person available to interview was some BE dev writing microservices asking very basic questions about JS.<p>Github was the absolute worst at this, applied for an accessibility FE position and the online assessment was to create a REST api. I just abandoned the process. Other companies were asking Qs about the frontend at least.<p>I feel like I can put up with the interviewing process from Facebook or Google because those companies pay the absolute best in our industry; most companies aren't paying the best but they all want to interview like they are FB. It's completely odd. Companies like Capital One, Fidelity were asking LC hards and paying below industry averages.<p>Another thing that I will absolutely never do are take homes, they are often too cryptic and while everyone says "spend no more than 3-hours" it feels like you need to put in 40 to stand a chance against those that do. They also require zero effort from the company. I want them to have some skin in the interviewing game. This is why I prefer white board style interviews, at least we are both awkwardly solving a problem. There is nothing absolutely worst than having a great talk with the HM and completing a take-home to only get completely ghosted.<p>The process for the position I accepted was this: spoke to recruiter, spoke to HM, "on-site" where I spoke to 6 different people in a 3-hour span with a decision being made that day. Probably spent a total of 5-hours interviewing. This is a decent company too; while pay is average for my location they give employees equity, have 401k matching, and an ESPP.<p>I think the onus should be put on companies. They often lament about candidates but the interview process is anything but accessible or reasonable.
I'd love to hold a full time job but everyone makes it so hard.<p>1. Interview processes. Job applications involve a 30 min technical test, and don't even give a thank you. I bet my résumé isn't even read. A lot of people complain about whiteboards, but I've only made it that far once. I've been rejected after interviewers comment on my beard or lack of personality, and yet the same people later commend me on my Facebook or HN posts.<p>2. Many Asian employers try to pay as little as possible, work you as hard as possible, and maximize office density. The message is you'd have to be stupid to stay.<p>3. A lot of companies are prestige oriented. This leads to some weird behavior like one office I saw where 1/4 of the office space is Avengers toys and the rest was office space for over a hundred staff.<p>4. Lack of growth or direction. Perhaps if a company had both of these, it would be a world class company within 5 years. But I'd say 98% of employers lack both. There are sane employers, but the corollary is that you have to be in the top 2% to work there.<p>Now I'm not saying the above applies to my current employer, in fact they're at the top 20% range. But switching jobs puts me at risk of falling into one of the above traps. I have a lot more control as a freelancer, but freelancing involves a lot of other skills that isn't coding.<p>Ultimately, I just want to write code for a living, and it's a shame that I probably have to start my own startup to do so.
Yes, nobody is even applying if the job opening doesn't state that remote work is allowed. People have so many opportunities these days, including side gigs.
I wonder if there's a market for a trusted headhunter. When they send somebody over they vouch for certain skills at some level, and all you have to interview them for is "culture fit" and other intangibles. (And they're interviewing you, too.)<p>That "vouch" could take whatever form, including leetcode or whiteboard or just another dev. It would be roughly the same crap as in any other interview. It would probably be a little rougher, in fact, since the whole point is that the company is staking its rep on you, and its rep is its only real value. But at least you'd only have to do it once.
Perhaps you would gain some insight by turning your question on its head: Why haven't you switched companies? What it is about the job market that makes you unwilling to leave your current gig?
Technical people are expensive (and hard to fire if they don't work out), which really raises the bar for minimum qualifications and skills. There's no room to "take a chance" on anyone anymore.<p>As a HM, most candidates I see are woefully underqualified. The great ones are beyond my (quite reasonable) budget. And I've seen this on the other side too: recruiters contacting me always want to hire me for mid-sr IC role when I've been managing teams for years.
There is no such thing, there are more developers than ever, but yes, it is my impression that some companies are getting priced out of the job market.
i’ve talked to some companies asking if they need help with projects (contracting) and every time they say they are looking to fill roles with employees. makes no sense?
<i>The pandemic has also made moonlighting more universal and more people looking for remote/part-time/fractional work.</i><p>These are all lumped together here, but they aren't the same things. Moonlighting is something you do in addition to your current job. Part time is less than 40 hours a week for most. Fractional I assume is gig or short term contracting work. The last one is remote. Plenty of people work remotely full time, but all of the other labor commitments can be done remotely as well. How are you seeing these individual items break down and overlap?<p>Are you able to offer remote full time positions? If not, I think that's likely to put you at a disadvantage moving forward if other companies you are competing against in the candidate pool can offer remote work.<p><i>Inbound applications are down and convincing experienced folks to switch jobs has become harder than ever.</i><p>Are you working with any recruiters or are you mainly relying on job postings to attract candidates? As a candidate I frequently prefer to work with a recruiter because they help remove uncertainty around dropping an application into a black box and hoping someone replies back. It also takes me out of the loop of dealing with any form of applicant tracking system or really doing anything more than just giving the recruiter a copy of my resume. Is it possible that your application process is turning away potential candidates due to too many hoops to jump through?<p><i>On the flip side, I wonder how folks looking for full-time roles are faring.</i><p>I'm not looking for new work, but I have recruiters and hiring managers reaching out to me very frequently at the moment. I want to be polite and not ignore anyone. However, it is currently hard to do with the volume I am seeing.<p>The reason I am not looking for work is that I am not dissatisfied. As others have pointed out in this thread, the hiring process is frankly arduous. In the last two years I have done quite a few interviews and my level of dissatisfaction will need to be very high for me to consider going through any of it again. As a candidate the interview process for tech roles is frustrating because it is so time consuming. Day to day, I really don't do much fancy algorithm work. It isn't something I'm particularly fascinated by either. As a result, finding a new job usually involves spending my free time brushing up on the subject. This takes time from things I'd rather be doing. Some employers offer take home exercises that are intended to focus on practical application of day to day skills, but these are no better because they still require a lot of time.<p>The discussion around hiring in tech is practically at a stalemate. No one can agree on anything other than the process not being very enjoyable. Unfortunately I don't have any meaningful insights to contribute here except if you can identify an interview process that isn't a hassle for candidates but still delivers whatever assurances you need that a candidate is capable of doing the job, you can probably increase your applicant pool.<p>I think there is plenty that can be done to address the hiring issues you are seeing. Make sure you can offer the perks candidates want like remote work. Make the application process easy, nothing more than a resume and maybe a cover letter. Make the interview process painless and advertise it.