Technical Interviews Reject the Wrong Engineers
4 hours ago
- #interview bias
- #hiring process
- #technical interviews
- Most companies' technical hiring processes act as broken filters, selecting for wrong qualities and rejecting candidates they cannot properly evaluate.
- Research debunks common cost-of-bad-hire statistics; the real focus should be avoiding toxic workers, who cost more than star performers add.
- Whiteboard and pair programming interviews are anxiety filters rather than talent filters, often failing to assess actual job performance and ignoring tacit knowledge.
- Personality assessments like Myers-Briggs are unethical for hiring, while growth mindset screenings lack predictive validity; the Big Five model is better supported but still limited.
- Seniority labels oversimplify skills; the Dreyfus model explains how expert intuition can be misinterpreted by rule-bound interviewers, leading to mismatches.
- Similarity bias, the Dunning-Kruger effect, and confirmation bias undermine interviews, with decisions often made quickly and lacking correlation to job performance.
- The FATE Metrics (Feedback, Accuracy, Time, Effort) provide a framework to evaluate interview processes, emphasizing real business scenarios over abstract puzzles.