Diversity and Inclusion in Plaid Engineering(blog.plaid.com)
blog.plaid.com
Diversity and Inclusion in Plaid Engineering
https://blog.plaid.com/2019-state-of-diversity-inclusion-in-plaid-engineering/
29 comments
It’s disappointing that this got flagged - has conversation become so polarized, so lacking any space for nuance, that we cant even have a discussion about this topic anymore?
Wintamute(4)
Talked to plaid, went through two long phone interviews before they told me they expected a take home project in addition to another phone screen and an in-person.
So sure, diversity as long as you’ve got a spare day or three to jump through their hoops. Doubt I’d see any parents or people over 30 in their diverse pool of people willing to work for free.
Edit: if this is your process please notify candidates at the outset.
So sure, diversity as long as you’ve got a spare day or three to jump through their hoops. Doubt I’d see any parents or people over 30 in their diverse pool of people willing to work for free.
Edit: if this is your process please notify candidates at the outset.
Take-home projects are a band-pass filter on hiring. The best candidates won't bother, the worst candidates can't complete.
Though, honestly, it seems like you could save everyone's time and get similar results screening for university GPA > 3.8.
Though, honestly, it seems like you could save everyone's time and get similar results screening for university GPA > 3.8.
GPA is maybe only relevant if you are very junior or it is the only thing on your resume. No one is going to care at all about your GPA once you are more than a few years into your career
They aren't looking for the best though. They are looking for diverse.
GPA's are meaningless now. Grade inflation, etc. Just like the adversity score that will be added to the SAT... making it meaningless... IQ tests are going to replace GPAs for hiring in general.
GPA's are meaningless now. Grade inflation, etc. Just like the adversity score that will be added to the SAT... making it meaningless... IQ tests are going to replace GPAs for hiring in general.
For developers at least you don’t need any kind of artificial scoring. If they pass the phone screen, just bring them in and pair with them on a contrived problem - you will know very quick if they are a fit or not.
Calling this "work for free" seems a bit misleading. It's not like the take home assignment is helping the employer build something.
I don't see it as unpaid labor anymore than I would see the interview process itself as unpaid labor.
I don't see it as unpaid labor anymore than I would see the interview process itself as unpaid labor.
The line is indeed blurry, but if it were to be drawn somewhere, I don't think it's unreasonable to draw it at being asked to create a small but complete instance of the work you are being hired for that may take anywhere from hours to days, as opposed to being asked to see existing examples.
It would be nice if there were some third party that companies could turn over the results of these interview project assignments to, which would allow release of that information to other companies upon authorization by the candidate.
The idea is that you interview at some place that asks for a substantial take-home interview project. You do it. Afterwards, the project requirements and your solution are turned over to third party.
Then the next place you interview wants a project, too. You can point them at the third party and authorize release of your info to them. They can then see what that first company asked for, see what you provided, and if it covers the same kind of things that their project does they might then accept it instead of making you do another one.
The idea is that you interview at some place that asks for a substantial take-home interview project. You do it. Afterwards, the project requirements and your solution are turned over to third party.
Then the next place you interview wants a project, too. You can point them at the third party and authorize release of your info to them. They can then see what that first company asked for, see what you provided, and if it covers the same kind of things that their project does they might then accept it instead of making you do another one.
lbrooks(2)
brenden2(2)
It's good to see a company openly sharing concrete numbers on diversity even when it doesn't necessarily paint them in a flattering light. This speaks better (to me, at least) than companies which make fluffy noises on diversity but refuse to share actual figures.