▲ | mynameisvlad 8 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
> there's something i always tell every single candidate i've ever interviewed: there are no wrong answers That's just objectively bullshit. If you don't know something, you probably are going to be marked down compared to a candidate that does know it. Even in a subjective question, your answer depends entirely on your interviewer's subjectivity. One interviewer might find an answer good while another finds it lacking. Interviews are one of few places where there are very clearly wrong answers. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | fernandotakai 8 hours ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
i disagree with you 100%. maybe for the jobs you are applying this is true, but for the places i've been searching for candidates, there are only answers and those answers will tell me (and other people in the pipeline) what to think of you. for my own process, answers are only data points and the whole point of interviewing is looking at datapoints and getting to an answer. it doesn't mean "the person that get everything right gets the job". once, i got a person that was incredibly smart, but they where not a cultural fit. we ended up hiring someone with less experience, but that person fit perfectly within the team. the first person answered everything perfectly, the second didn't. | |||||||||||||||||
|