H2 tags : 12 Questions to Ask a Potential Tech Employer; The Story So Far...; Questions to Ask Potential Employers
1. Do you support telecommuting? If so, how much?
This might not be as important to some people but it's pretty big to me.
2. Do developers have uninterruptible hours in the office?
This is really, really important and horribly overlooked in a lot of office environments--and one of my biggest reasons for wanting to negotiate telecommuting time into the deal. Take 15 minutes, if you have it, and watch this TED Talk by Jason Fried on "Why Work Doesn't Happen at Work"--If you don't have 15 minutes now, email it to yourself and watch it later. This really is important:
3. What kind strategies do you have for dealing with the post-lunchtime productivity dip? Or do you think that's not an issue in your environment, and why?
Do you notice that when you get back from lunch, there's a grey haze that fills the aura of the room. Everyone is more tired, unfocused--there's an obvious loss of momentum? I've seen this happen in every office I've ever worked in. At home, I've developed many strategies and I find that I can deal with it much better. This can be as simple as a 5 minute pep scrum meeting, in which everyone just says, this is what I'm heading to my desk to do right now. Go team. Just a simple boost to get people refocused.
4. How would you describe your typical workflow methodology? Do you subscribe to Agile/Lean?
If you work in tech, this is really good to know as it will affect the style of your daily interactions as well as your long-term planning cycles.
5. What is a typical day like in your office (as far as the whole team is concerned)?
Are there 3-4 meetings a day? Does everyone typically go to lunch together? Do people order lunch in? Are there games or other activities in the office that people use to unwind? Do people come in at 8am, sit at a desk and hammer on a keyboard for 8 hours without looking up?
The key point of this question is to flush out what the people interactions are like. Focus on that--dive deeper if needed.
6. What is your philosophy regarding on-the-job growth and development?
There are a lot of sub-questions to this that boil it down to suggestions--I've worked in many places that have some or all of the following and I find they are especially needed in the tech field where technologies change every few months and you really have to spend time keeping abreast or you fall way behind: Do you have a weekly show and tell? An email group list for sharing resources and information? Do people independently get together in groups to explore new technologies? Is there required or allowed time to pursue learning new things that relate to the position?
7. What changes do you see coming for your company in the next 6-12 months?
Allowing for the possibility that you will need to sign an NDA to get access to such information, companies should have a roadmap for growth and change. Is the small company planning on staying small? Are they looking at Acquisition or IPO? Are they planning to double their staff?
8. What differentiates your company from companies like you?
Hopefully, you've done a little research and can name a few competitors.
9. How do you gather opinions and feedback on solutions for your business needs?
This gets into all kinds of things. Primarily, I want to know where in the spectrum they fall between the following two company descriptions:
1. Closed box world, in which the CEO makes business decisions and promises, passes needs to the design team, which then creates a design, having no feedback from development or anyone else and the developers end up with an external deadline to complete said design.
2. Everyone in the company (design, development, test, UX, operations, management) is involved in giving feedback on ways to address business needs, formulate design with feedback strewn throughout the process and works together to create estimates and expectations.
10. How do employees communicate with each other?
Is this a massive email shop? Do they use an internal IM? Skype? Meetings? What's the percentage on face-to-face vs. email/IM vs. group meetings?
11. If someone has had this position before, what did you especially like about his/her performance? If not, what would you most like to see accomplished in this position?
Trying to bring it up to positive reflection at this point after we've given a few potential down notes. This allows you to see what will be expected of you as a basis for comparison on the last person or what they hope to find in a new role fulfillment.
12. What's your favorite thing about working here?
This ends the interview on a positive note and gives vital insight on why the interviewer cares about the company.
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