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birdymcbird | 2 years ago

>>>> Many interviewers fail to provide enough context and that leaves the interpretation of the prompt too wide open.

yes but this not a defect as youre viewing it.

in real world at amazon, your job to deal with ambiguity. the hand holding phase where youre given or told exactly what to do is maybe 1-2 year for college level hire. you work with ambiguity or you move out.

if you do not want ambiguity challenge then amazon not best fit for you. its not for everyone and amazon certainly has big problems in its culture. not defending any of it but saying to you what it is.

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CharlieDigital|2 years ago

The difference is that in an interview context, there's almost always a defined endpoint; a narrow path that defines success. A 30-60 minute interview isn't the same thing as a 6 month project where you get a chance to meet with multiple stakeholders, digest the inputs, ask followups and so on.

This is why we see the rise of the "never ending interviews[0]". If you want an effective interview -- as an interviewer -- then understand what output you are measuring (like any good experiment) and then see if your subject can arrive at that outcome when given the context and 30-60 minutes.

Don't waste your own time disqualifying perfectly good candidates by playing games with ambiguity when you already know what you are looking for.

[0] https://www.bbc.com/worklife/article/20210727-the-rise-of-ne...