Also, you need to computer-optimize your resume now. JobScan is a good tool for that - You give it your resume and a job listing, and it'll tell you what keywords you need to add to your resume to have a better chance of getting noticed. If you tell it what company you're applying to, they sometimes will even know what HR tool will be used to screen you and optimize their suggestions even further.
This is sadly true. And also be picky about what you add. We’ve had candidates come in with all the buzzwords on their resume to get the recruiter’s attention, we bring them in, and they can’t answer anything past a Google search on any buzzword but maybe one.
It’s really awkward to end a group interview only one round of questions in for everyone involved. “Anyone have any other questions?”
Obviously these got rushed during the phone interview process. It happens. Should have never made it past that screening.
I swear a couple of them were just doing interviews to tick off the required job hunting tasks on unemployment insurance here. That or they hated the place the second they walked in. Either way. Weird.
Our shop leans toward open source tools and such and I believe at least two of our developers have been hired by networking with our other devs and their boss at a local user group for one of the major technologies we use.
Sysadmins we rarely need more but we seriously grill folks. Mostly to see not only knowledge but depth. They’re still hired without being super deep in everything, but we have to know where they fit and where we’ll need to mentor. Most sysadmins are jack of all trades types with a specialty or two. If the specialty is complimentary, great. If it’s not, we have to decide if someone more senior wants a new speciality while the newbie comes up to speed.
Business need is huge. If a customer just dropped a huge security project in our lap, guess who we need to hire?
Networking can help in this case. Folks talk about their upcoming challenges at events, online, and such.
I’ve also seen the opposite of what Kent was talking about. Someone so bent on a speciality that they showed outright disdain for doing anything else. That never goes well for them in a small company. We had a candidate once at a bigger place than I’m at now who said flat out he was a DBA and he wouldn’t do anything else. Okay, there’s the door bud.
And then there’s the guy who was great, knew lots of stuff, got along with everyone, and lied to three bosses who had seen the surveillance video of him putting a 40 ounce Coke on top of a rack of $300,000 worth of servers and argued with the data center tech who caught him and told him to get rid of it. Guy threw away a nearly six figure salary over lying repeatedly about a Coke. Stupid son of a...