What data/evidence do you use to differentiate between "doesn't currently have the skill mix to be sufficiently productive" and "we sucked at helping the person ramp up"? The onboarding status quo is very, very bad almost everywhere.
-
-
Replying to @weswinham @danluu
In interviews, I ask about hires that don't work out. Common answer: "They would sit at their desk, not ask for help, and produce almost no working code. They weren't a culture fit because they obviously weren't trying."
1 reply 0 retweets 1 like -
Replying to @weswinham @danluu
I can think of several root causes that would produce that behavior (not caring, low-trust history discouraged help, mismatched expectations, too junior, bad project management, etc). But the explanation given has been "not a culture fit" in ~35 of 40 discovery interviews.
0 replies 0 retweets 4 likes -
Replying to @Springcoil @danluu
That "low trust history" problem is very real, agreed. And under-discussed. There are a lot of dysfunctional teams out there, and I have to remind myself that moving to a better one doesn't automatically change someone's norms. I've made that (wrong) assumption before
0 replies 0 retweets 2 likes -
Replying to @Springcoil @weswinham
I've heard "not trying" a lot, but it's never been true in the cases I've seen (although I'm sure it must happen sometimes). In the cases I've personally seen, the person who "isn't trying" is trying very hard, often obviously making large sacrifices in their personal life.
1 reply 0 retweets 4 likes -
On the skill question, it's just observational anecdotal evidence. Additionally, the company I worked for that had the lowest interview bar never had a problem with someone who wasn't competent to do the work, and the place with the highest skill bar didn't have better engineers.
1 reply 0 retweets 3 likes -
Well, they were certainly better at solving whiteboard interview questions (their phone screen was whiteboard-harder than the other co's onsite interview). But on avg, the company I worked at with basically no whiteboard filter had the most productive folks I've ever worked with.
1 reply 0 retweets 3 likes
At every other place I've worked, a pretty large fraction of people appear to do little to no work for various reasons. I don't understand why companies don't try to reduce the rate of this (other than the first company I worked at).
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.