idk how you define interview, but for my team (engineering/automation), we do an HR screening call, a phone interview, and then finally an onsite walk around of the shop to ensure they’re able to communicate effectively and talk about machines.
skipping the later steps just wastes our time and results in hiring shit people
I certainly don’t want to spend more time than necessary interviewing people, and this is how we’ve determined is best to achieve that
total time is probably 20 min for the HR screen, anywhere from 5-60 minutes for the phone interview (the better it goes, the longer it goes, and I certainly don’t force extending it, it’s allowed to happen at the applicant’s direction. standard length would be maybe 25 minutes to cover the necessary points and get a pass, any shorter and it means the applicant is crap). and same thing for the walk through, it’s only going to be about 15 minutes required, but then can go much longer if we’re having a good time. which is the case a surprising amount of the time
What you’re describing is pretty understandable. But I’ve also been in multi-round interviews where I’m talking to different people but saying the exact same things, which is frustrating.
yeah, and that’s something I’m super against. all of our stages cover different material, and the actual interviews are with the same people (with the bonus of meeting some other people onsite if they’re available, just to have a chat)
My current job had me pretty much interview with every member of my now team. It was insane and I’m happy I didn’t have to do it while unemployed and desperately searching. I can’t imagine going through that repeatedly
For my current web developer position I had to walk through generating a Ruby on Rails app and creating a blog with some controllers, models, etc. It was so basic that I was concerned the company would end up being terrible.
I’ve now worked there for 4+ years and I later found out they were simply filtering out applicants who claimed to know the framework but then didn’t even know basic Ruby. Like, applicants from completely different programming languages would apply and try to pretend they knew it come interview time.
idk how you define interview, but for my team (engineering/automation), we do an HR screening call, a phone interview, and then finally an onsite walk around of the shop to ensure they’re able to communicate effectively and talk about machines.
skipping the later steps just wastes our time and results in hiring shit people
I certainly don’t want to spend more time than necessary interviewing people, and this is how we’ve determined is best to achieve that
total time is probably 20 min for the HR screen, anywhere from 5-60 minutes for the phone interview (the better it goes, the longer it goes, and I certainly don’t force extending it, it’s allowed to happen at the applicant’s direction. standard length would be maybe 25 minutes to cover the necessary points and get a pass, any shorter and it means the applicant is crap). and same thing for the walk through, it’s only going to be about 15 minutes required, but then can go much longer if we’re having a good time. which is the case a surprising amount of the time
What you’re describing is pretty understandable. But I’ve also been in multi-round interviews where I’m talking to different people but saying the exact same things, which is frustrating.
yeah, and that’s something I’m super against. all of our stages cover different material, and the actual interviews are with the same people (with the bonus of meeting some other people onsite if they’re available, just to have a chat)
My current job had me pretty much interview with every member of my now team. It was insane and I’m happy I didn’t have to do it while unemployed and desperately searching. I can’t imagine going through that repeatedly
For my current web developer position I had to walk through generating a Ruby on Rails app and creating a blog with some controllers, models, etc. It was so basic that I was concerned the company would end up being terrible.
I’ve now worked there for 4+ years and I later found out they were simply filtering out applicants who claimed to know the framework but then didn’t even know basic Ruby. Like, applicants from completely different programming languages would apply and try to pretend they knew it come interview time.