I'm also going to throw my own gripe here: applicant tracking platforms that require you to set up logins in order to apply for a job.
There's a lot about typical application processes that's just... kind of obnoxious. Making people manually correct the bad parsing your tracker does on uploading your resume? That's clunky and annoying, and a failure to respect your applicants' time. Making people beg for a job by writing up a 500 word essay about what excites you about them specifically, along with their opinions about puppies just so that you know it was personally crafted? (And yes, I've seen that specifically.) That's kind of demeaning, and a failure to respect your applicants' time.
But requiring that they create a discrete user account, for something they're effectively going to interact with once, that in all likelihood is using a recycled login and going to be forgotten in a week? That's on a completely separate level -- it's a failure to respect your applicants' security, by pointlessly adding to the risk that their user credentials are going to show up on Have I Been Pwned someday, and it's just irresponsible.
- You can do anything (frontend backend ci/cd backend product management IT)
- We’re a family here
- Yeet ninja 10x rockstars, “you friends see you as a badass hacker” (yes I saw the latter in a job description)
- 120k - 165k for a junior position
I haven’t gotten enough jobs to have a clear green flag filter, but my most delightful interviewing experiences have been take home projects to demonstrate ability to reason about a domain that pertains to the job for which I’m applying. E.g. “build a web server that can return X and memoizes results, bonus points for creating a one-click-run Docker image for the project”.
>my most delightful interviewing experiences have been take home projects to demonstrate ability to reason about a domain that pertains to the job for which I’m applying
I can't figure out if you're being serious ... or if that's raining sarcasm
- bad Glassdoor reviews or not enough reviews (I would be looking for at least 1k reviews to consider a company). Anything 4+ stars with 1k+ reviews should be good
- most adverts coming from random (and new) 3rd party recruiters outside the companies themselves. They hire these recruiters because they know their role/company is shit and no one would apply otherwise
- any 200 people or less company (most startups are shit)
- any in the adtech/crypto industry
- any saying that they will "disrupt the market"
- recruitment/HR barely if ever replying after offer was "verbally given"
- not having benefits package (bonus, health, dental, pension etc)
- offering lower than previously mentioned or below industry standards compensation
- paying their seniors the same as junior or mid
- majority of their work force made up of cheap labour from third world countries
- having offices in third world countries to do their dirty job for nearly free
- not declaring the tech stack clearly or the role duties
"Vacation is accrued over the first year" and it turns out that means you can't take any vacation for a year. Benefits cost more than they would through the exchanges...and they get a kickback when employees do not use the insurance, so it's a moneymaker for them. Also, the insurance requires disclosing all health conditions on an unprotected form that goes to HR creating an incentive for hiring younger and healthier people. There is a core group of long-serving employees and a revolving door for others. "Family" atmosphere in general--that is not a model for a workplace, it is a model for a family.
I personally hate seeing "Computer Science or Finance degree." Immediately this tells me this is a junk data entry job. Finance majors couldnt even code a stock tracking app in python even if you gave them the code base from the start and apl they needed was to add the logic. Half the time business analysts to me, are just faf middle management employees that dont do much.
There's a lot about typical application processes that's just... kind of obnoxious. Making people manually correct the bad parsing your tracker does on uploading your resume? That's clunky and annoying, and a failure to respect your applicants' time. Making people beg for a job by writing up a 500 word essay about what excites you about them specifically, along with their opinions about puppies just so that you know it was personally crafted? (And yes, I've seen that specifically.) That's kind of demeaning, and a failure to respect your applicants' time.
But requiring that they create a discrete user account, for something they're effectively going to interact with once, that in all likelihood is using a recycled login and going to be forgotten in a week? That's on a completely separate level -- it's a failure to respect your applicants' security, by pointlessly adding to the risk that their user credentials are going to show up on Have I Been Pwned someday, and it's just irresponsible.