(no title)
mr_briggs | 1 year ago
> Sure, the tech stack might be exciting. Or the product may be compelling. The work-life balance may be good. But I promise you that the biggest reason is still money.
I was always under the impression that for a paid job, the reason of money is assumed. Companies want to hear your other reasons - to show you are at least trying to appreciate what they're about aside from making money. Was the question ever being asked to find the main reason?
johnfn|1 year ago
dzikimarian|1 year ago
zwnow|1 year ago
__loam|1 year ago
Applying for companies you want to work at almost seems stupid when more than half the time they just send you an email telling you they don't think you're a good fit. It's a luxury and a privilege to work at a so called dream job. In my view, and especially in the current market, the optimal strategy is to talk to whichever recruiter is emailling you, and do no additional research until after the technical interviews are over with. It's frankly a huge waste of time to know anything about a company before you even know if they have a position for you. Having the expectation that your employees care as much about the company as you do is just ignorance.
metabagel|1 year ago
A better way to go about it is to examine the preferred working style of the applicant vs the way the company operates.