|
Corla Plankun posted:i agree with this attitude, almost none of this is important just fucken get paid and escape capitalism none of us escape the event horizon, but it’s way more comfortable circling the hole of capital with dental insurance and a nice apartment.
|
# ? Jun 14, 2022 19:48 |
|
|
# ? Jan 18, 2025 11:17 |
|
what I'm saying is that employers do not have sole responsibility for evaluating your competence as a hire. you have to do it to, with the long game in mind. so don't tell a lie that you aren't prepared to live with
Gazpacho fucked around with this message at 20:32 on Jun 14, 2022 |
# ? Jun 14, 2022 20:26 |
|
|
# ? Jun 14, 2022 20:57 |
|
everyone is an absolute rear end in a top hat and buffoon
|
# ? Jun 15, 2022 03:47 |
|
ultravoices posted:none of us escape the event horizon, but it’s way more comfortable circling the hole of capital with dental insurance and a nice apartment.
|
# ? Jun 15, 2022 11:44 |
|
what are ya'lls opinions on accepting a job with a company that directly competes with the company your husband/wife/partner works for mention it? if so, during the different screens or at the (potential) offer stage? don't mention it? the burden is on the company to prove some sort of conflict of interest in a given incident only when they think it happens? in my case we're talking about individual contributor roles in both companies, both are sales adjacent but neither are directly sales
|
# ? Jun 22, 2022 11:45 |
|
Asymmetric POSTer posted:what are ya'lls opinions on accepting a job with a company that directly competes with the company your husband/wife/partner works for this kind of thing matters for executives and theyll make you sign some document where you say you have honestly no conflicts of interest i think its how this works anyway, so if they dont ask then you don’t tell them either
|
# ? Jun 22, 2022 11:48 |
|
Could be a value add... Could you flip each other's loyalties, do a double agent heist triple cross, and escape the clutches of both companies with ur wife?
|
# ? Jun 22, 2022 11:57 |
|
Asymmetric POSTer posted:what are ya'lls opinions on accepting a job with a company that directly competes with the company your husband/wife/partner works for Your private life is not your employers concern.
|
# ? Jun 22, 2022 12:09 |
|
yeah if the job doesnt have "chief" in it then nobody gives a poo poo
|
# ? Jun 22, 2022 12:18 |
|
Asymmetric POSTer posted:what are ya'lls opinions on accepting a job with a company that directly competes with the company your husband/wife/partner works for No need to discuss in the interview. If it ever comes out in the job, just tell them you're just hedging. Have you seen the Q2 earnings? Everyone should be so lucky to have a spouse at <competitor>.
|
# ? Jun 22, 2022 15:18 |
|
chances are half the sales staff of that org already come from the competitor anyway or something.
|
# ? Jun 22, 2022 18:38 |
|
just got a voicemail from a gig I applied to months ago asking me to call them back to schedule an interview what loving year is it?
|
# ? Jun 22, 2022 18:41 |
|
A large upscale retail company sends me rejection letters for the same application every 6 or 7 weeks since September or so. I've started replying to each one saying I'm glad I'm not responsible for their software if their CRM is that lovely but I doubt that ever gets to a person.
|
# ? Jun 22, 2022 19:01 |
|
RokosCockatrice posted:No need to discuss in the interview. If it ever comes out in the job, just tell them you're just hedging. Have you seen the Q2 earnings? Everyone should be so lucky to have a spouse at <competitor>. lol thanks everyone, mostly worries about an awkward conversation post-hire (if I get the job) where someone asks what my partner does and then follows up with where
|
# ? Jun 22, 2022 19:09 |
|
nudgenudgetilt posted:just got a voicemail from a gig I applied to months ago asking me to call them back to schedule an interview
|
# ? Jun 22, 2022 19:29 |
|
Asymmetric POSTer posted:lol you don't have to share personal details of your partner with your colleagues though.
|
# ? Jun 22, 2022 19:32 |
|
Asymmetric POSTer posted:lol "Oh she has a job too, doing thangs, making money, making moves, job title of girlboss, she is very proud would you like me to show you her linkedin" And that offer will be politely rejected and never thought about again.
|
# ? Jun 22, 2022 19:37 |
|
4lokos basilisk posted:you don't have to share personal details of your partner with your colleagues though. no, but you can come off as a super weirdo by declining to answer (in most people’s minds) a fairly innocent question in a social situation
|
# ? Jun 22, 2022 19:52 |
|
just do the whole prolouge from romeo and juliet but substitute the city you work in for veronaquote:Two households, both alike in dignity
|
# ? Jun 22, 2022 19:58 |
|
doing an interview for the first time in five years+ tomorrow and I really appreciated the OP so thank you.
|
# ? Jun 22, 2022 20:57 |
|
qirex posted:(in fair YOSPOS, where we lay our scene),
|
# ? Jun 22, 2022 22:19 |
|
carry on then posted:ah, the average Hacktoberfest participant i salute whomever submitted the recent "correct Github to GitHub" PR to one of our projects for their commitment to the big green contribution graph hustle it was easy to review vov
|
# ? Jun 23, 2022 07:42 |
|
Asymmetric POSTer posted:no, but you can come off as a super weirdo by declining to answer (in most people’s minds) a fairly innocent question in a social situation you can be vague like “shes an office worker like me” and then the asker will have to start prying i always say about my partner that “they work in [vague business segment or trade]” edit: i admit that maybe i give off a weird shutin vibe to my coworkers
|
# ? Jun 23, 2022 10:16 |
|
it's a conversation not a deposition. you can be vague.
|
# ? Jun 23, 2022 10:21 |
|
Asymmetric POSTer posted:no, but you can come off as a super weirdo by declining to answer (in most people’s minds) a fairly innocent question in a social situation just deny having a wife/girlfriend
|
# ? Jun 23, 2022 10:40 |
|
no one will give two fucks if your partner is a peon cog at a competitor
|
# ? Jun 23, 2022 10:57 |
|
I sent out my resume earlier this year and wasn't getting a lot of hits at least compared to when I last did this in the DC area many years ago. I decided to redo my resume, but it's been a while and I have a couple of questions about how to structure some of it. I don't know if there is a better thread for it, so i'll ask them here. A lot of the work I have done in the past/currently am doing involves just maintaining software and very rarely working on actual new features. What's the best way to word this? Is it better to focus on a specific portion, or a specific feature? How exactly should you word things you did that improved the general time it took to do a task but don't know specifics? Does it look bad if you don't have formal measurements for stuff like that? As an example in one my previous jobs I setup Jenkins to build and deploy our software. We never actually took formal measurements but informally it reduced a process that took a couple of hours to about 1-2 hours. As far as general structure goes I've been using this template as my model. Does that look like a good starting point? I'd share what i have currently but my resume has too much PII and I don't want to doxx myself. Thanks for any advice in advance.
|
# ? Jun 24, 2022 00:12 |
|
if you did something that saved time, put it in eng hours and say how much you saved. if you don't have measurements, ballpark it. as long as you aren't lying nobody's gonna ask you to more than a "saves 3 hours per run times 10 engineers times 100 runs each per year" or whatever post the resume
|
# ? Jun 24, 2022 00:15 |
|
OP questions got me a second interview. Asked two of them to the boss in today's call and he was blown away.
|
# ? Jun 24, 2022 14:39 |
|
Video Nasty posted:OP questions got me a second interview. Asked two of them to the boss in today's call and he was blown away. yah, that's good poo poo I got raised eyebrows and a "that's a really good question" from one of them when I was interviewing for my current job
|
# ? Jun 24, 2022 15:42 |
|
also, as an interviewer, candidates are so bad at asking questions that if anyone actually asked anything remotely similar to any questions there, I'd assume they were a goon
|
# ? Jun 24, 2022 15:44 |
|
one question that i like to ask is "do you feel that you are able to produce results that satisfy your personal level of quality?" i think this should reveal whether the organization cares about producing quality results or something
|
# ? Jun 24, 2022 15:45 |
|
The Fool posted:also, as an interviewer, candidates are so bad at asking questions that if anyone actually asked anything remotely similar to any questions there, I'd assume they were a goon the number of candidates that decline to ask any questions at all is loving astounding to me. it's not most of them by any means but it's a lot more than i would have expected
|
# ? Jun 24, 2022 17:41 |
|
I've been that candidate as a young person, for me it stemmed from the extreme stress of the interview in general and the fact that I had no experience to draw from in which to craft questions. getting to the end of the interview itself was overwhelming and trying to think of something worth asking on the spot was extremely difficult now, how someone older than college age continually does this I'll never know
|
# ? Jun 24, 2022 17:48 |
|
i just finished a process where every interview ostensibly had some planned time in the end for me to ask questions, but when we got to that point we usually had like 2-3 minutes of time left and while i did ask stuff it never became a longer discussion where i hoped that both parties would learn something
|
# ? Jun 24, 2022 17:51 |
|
Truman Peyote posted:the number of candidates that decline to ask any questions at all is loving astounding to me. it's not most of them by any means but it's a lot more than i would have expected I just didn't know what to ask. I would usually ask "what is a typical day like?" and that is about it. Now that i'm older and have worked a bunch i'd probably ask most of the questions in the OP as a default.
|
# ? Jun 24, 2022 18:05 |
|
I have a continuously growing list of questions in a Google doc. Whenever I run into something that's either "That's awesome, how do I make sure I find this again in the future" or "this is absolute garbage I never want to encounter this in a job again", it goes in the list. An obvious one that has saved me some grief is "Can I get a short product demo at some point during the interview process, to have a better understanding of what I'd be working on?" If they show you a janky pos app, makes it very easy to turn down and move on
|
# ? Jun 24, 2022 18:11 |
|
I have a fake-leather bound portfolio folder with a notepad in it i take to all my interviews. It has a few printed resumes and more importantly, notes from every interview I've gone on. I have a poo poo load of questions and answers and what to expect right in front of me, I bring the folder to interviews. It makes me look professional as hell and I never forget to ask anything because I have a list right in front of my eyes. Then I write down the answers so I can compare them to other companies/offers
|
# ? Jun 24, 2022 18:23 |
|
|
# ? Jan 18, 2025 11:17 |
|
reversefungi posted:An obvious one that has saved me some grief is "Can I get a short product demo at some point during the interview process, to have a better understanding of what I'd be working on?" If they show you a janky pos app, makes it very easy to turn down and move on gently caress me how haven't I thought of this already it's a great idea
|
# ? Jun 24, 2022 18:24 |