| ▲ | austin-cheney 2 days ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
As a hiring manager know what you want and be careful what you communicate to determine your desired audience. Secondly, skill verification is a form of leaky abstraction and may not be what hiring managers want. It’s most often not about finding the most skilled candidate but rather the most compatible candidate. This can commonly mean finding the least sucky person from a pool of sucky people. Hiring managers can game that by setting requirements criteria for a job. If you want extremely skilled people then get down to the metal and find candidates that like to work without tools or abstractions. If you super versatile candidates find people with experience in a bazillion different tools. If you just want a body to fill a seat that is quick to hire/fire select for the latest trendy framework. The best way to determine the right candidate is to ignore the nonsense on their resume and just talk to people. Dig in and see what they really want and then challenge it with questions only they can answer. Most people are bodies just wanting to be hired without bringing anything special to the table so that’s what most employers target for. The real challenge here is finding people that are highly skilled in a market where exceptional skills outside the bell curve are not commonly rewarded, because these people will not self identify as awesome when looking for work in compatibility driven system. The people that most typically do identify as awesome tend to not be as awesome as they believe. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | ms_sv 2 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
This is a real insight "finding the most skilled candidate but rather the most compatible candidate", thank you very much, this is the kind of feedback I am looking for from engineers. I never looked at it from this perspective. I talked to hiring managers and most of them say skills is good but what we want is a personality because skills can be taught and personality cannot be. Personality I have experienced that, very skilled teammate exceptional, but personality was not a fit, so the management was not happy. "The best way to determine the right candidate is to ignore the nonsense on their resume and just talk to people.", that is true and this I have tried with when I was playing the role of hiring manager trying to find a team member to work with me in the company I worked for. I imagine the peer-to-peer verification framework like this talk to people and ask them personalized questions, this is how exceptional talent will be flushed out I think. Given that, if you were to imagine a tool that helps surface those 'quietly exceptional' people—the ones who are highly skilled but won't self-identify—what would that tool look like? Does it even need to be a tool to begin with? | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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