It's hard only hiring the best and brightest as I assume there is only x% of people who you qualify as best and brightest. How many other companies are you competing with to get this so called "best and brightest"?
> How many other companies are you competing with to get this so called "best and brightest"?
If you're willing to hire remotely and hire from your online community as Jeff suggests, you're competing with surprisingly few companies.
I'm part of a small Microsoft SQL Server consultancy, and competition for good database performance tuners is notoriously difficult. However, when we publish a blog post that we're hiring, we get overwhelmed with applicants. Most of our competitors require an onsite presence, make the employees show up in an office from 9 to 5, and hire in cities with high costs of living. We don't - so we don't end up with much competition for brilliant people who just happen to have family ties to smaller communities.
With so many companies infamously doing a bad job of hiring and managing people, if you're good at both, I don't see why it couldn't be achievable.
Sure, plenty of those companies say, and maybe even think, they're "only hiring the best and brightest", but if they're wrong, or not good at retaining them....
The existence of articles like these seems to suggest that there really might not be that many people out there competing for the best and brightest (competing effectively anyway). If only 5% of companies are willing to pay top dollar, and only 5% of those are willing to allow remote, there may not be that much competition left over.
BrentOzar|12 years ago
If you're willing to hire remotely and hire from your online community as Jeff suggests, you're competing with surprisingly few companies.
I'm part of a small Microsoft SQL Server consultancy, and competition for good database performance tuners is notoriously difficult. However, when we publish a blog post that we're hiring, we get overwhelmed with applicants. Most of our competitors require an onsite presence, make the employees show up in an office from 9 to 5, and hire in cities with high costs of living. We don't - so we don't end up with much competition for brilliant people who just happen to have family ties to smaller communities.
hga|12 years ago
Sure, plenty of those companies say, and maybe even think, they're "only hiring the best and brightest", but if they're wrong, or not good at retaining them....
morganherlocker|12 years ago