-
5 votes
-
Game Freak acknowledges massive Pokémon data breach, as employee info appears online
16 votes -
Riot lays off more League of Legends developers while promising to increase team size
11 votes -
A fivefold increase in remote work since the pandemic could boost economic growth and bring wider benefits
18 votes -
A peek inside doctors’ notes reveals symptoms of burnout
14 votes -
How does your HR department handle the deluge of job applications? And how does that affect you as a hiring manager?
I just chatted online with someone currently hiring for a mid-level software engineer who received more than 2,000 applications. That’s ridiculous. So (inspired by actual events), I’m writing a...
I just chatted online with someone currently hiring for a mid-level software engineer who received more than 2,000 applications. That’s ridiculous.
So (inspired by actual events), I’m writing a freelanced article, "Upending the hiring process for technical talent.” Although the topic applies to any job search situation, the story is tuned to software developers and other tech fields, and I expect both remote work and AI to be primary factors.
Getting thousands of applications is nuts for both the company and the applicants. My question is, "What — if anything — can be done to make the process more sane for everybody?"
I would love input from the wise people on Tildes. (Formal attribution is not required, but context is helpful for verisimilitude: "...says one program lead from a midwest insurance firm.") I know you have opinions. However, the HIVE MIND responses I care about should come from people who have been affected by this change – primarily HR professionals and tech industry hiring managers. My short (?) list of questions:
• How many job applications do you typically get today for a technical position such as a software engineer? How has that number changed?
• Are there differences in the applications? I’m open to anything from “remote work expanded the number of people who want to work here” to “They are impersonal and seem AI-generated” to… well, what? Tell me.
• How do you triage the applications (no / maybe / worth talking to)? How long does it take? For HR, what percentage of the applications are provided to the hiring managers? For hiring managers, how does that percentage make you feel?
• How have you changed job listings? For instance, are you asking for more information in the application process or including more detail in the job req? Are you employing tools that claim to sort responses? Are you offering salary transparency so that nobody wastes time when the numbers don’t align?
• What changes have you implemented in the job process? (Turning more to recruiters, for instance? Relying more on employee referrals?)
• Is “return to office” an issue here? (I would imagine that “local candidates only” would reduce the number of applications, but I don’t want to assume too much about any HR connection.)
• Regardless of what your company IS doing to deal with the job application deluge, what — if anything — do you think COULD be done to make the process more sane for everybody? What would you do if you could wave a magic wand to address the problem?28 votes -
The mystery of the cover letter
6 votes -
The collapse of self-worth in the digital age
30 votes -
The massive US port strike has begun: 'We are prepared to fight as long as necessary'
53 votes -
Dockworkers' union to suspend strike in US until Jan. 15, source says
46 votes -
The white collar apocalypse is nigh
30 votes -
India is home to six visa temples where many NRIs got visa boons to live American Dream or work in other countries
2 votes -
Negotiators have one week to save US east coast from long shore workers strike and import disruptions
9 votes -
Battery giant Northvolt to cut 25% of workforce in Sweden as part of a major cost-cutting drive – roughly 1,600 employees, including 1,000 positions at its factory in Skellefteå
13 votes -
Beyond the politics of nostalgia: What the fall of the steel industry can tell us about the future of America
16 votes -
Prison inmates in Finland are being employed as data labellers to improve accuracy of AI models
22 votes -
Inside Annapurna Interactive's mass walkout: Internal politics, the surprise Remedy deal, and why it all happened
50 votes -
Annapurna video-game team resigns, leaving partners scrambling
45 votes -
Amazon tells staff to get back in the office
43 votes -
Danish firm DSV secures deal to buy Schenker, the logistics arm of German state railway Deutsche Bahn – will become world's largest logistics company
5 votes -
Microsoft lays off another 650 staff from its video game workforce
21 votes -
Swedish battery company Northvolt has announced it would be laying off a large part of its workforce and selling or consolidating several sites as the electric vehicle market slows down
11 votes -
Dutch will spend $2.7 billion on improving infrastructure to keep ASML
7 votes -
Why AI can push you to make the wrong decision at work
8 votes -
Helldivers 2 support studio Toadman Interactive to shut offices in Sweden and Norway – some positions at developer's Berlin office also at risk
14 votes -
Here’s twenty-two examples of Google employees trying to avoid creating evidence in antitrust case
47 votes -
r/science user about long-term unemployment
29 votes -
NY Times Tech Guild: We are celebrating Labor Day by announcing that a supermajority of our over-600 person union signed a pledge of support for a strike
26 votes -
Why is Finland's biggest retailer urging customers to welcome foreign workers?
15 votes -
Wells Fargo employee in Arizona found dead at her desk four days after clocking in
27 votes -
Ok seriously what the fuck do I do
if i chart my life happiness, fulfilment, success over the past four years, the trend is clearly downwards. some clear wins and stretches of improvement, some quite significant, which i am proud...
if i chart my life happiness, fulfilment, success over the past four years, the trend is clearly downwards. some clear wins and stretches of improvement, some quite significant, which i am proud of, but overall, i am getting worse and worse and worse. i attribute my problems mostly to two things: severe social isolation, and an extreme deficit of executive function. however i got here, i'm stuck with the fallout
my memory is bad, and my attention shot, so i kind of don't know what's happened emotionally. i know some focal points, though
this past march, i had a major depressive episode, and it feels like i spent most of a week doing nothing but crying, for no reason at all. i'm not sure how i fed myself
at the beginning of 2022, i quit my (very cushy and chill) job, which i had had for a little over a year at that point, because i felt like i was unmotivated and not actually doing work. (the facts are a bit more subtle; it was partly that the work itself was uninteresting to me, and they wanted to work with me to find something for me to do that i would find more interesting. i was going along with that, until a new opportunity appeared, which i jumped for because i wanted to be able to make a clean break. that opportunity immediately fell through.) i had been living with my parents until shortly before, so i had a lot of savings
now, i find myself in a similar situation, only much more dire. a friend got me a job working with smart people on interesting problems. i have not been doing well. i have been extremely uncommunicative. the pattern is clear: i talk to people, flex my technical chops; they are impressed and like me a lot. then i'm not very productive, and my output slowly deteriorates to nil. i think i just can't do wfh tech work. last week was a blur. i don't know what happened at all. i don't think i've checked slack in close to two weeks, and atp i'm a little bit afraid to. two weeks ago, i asked my friend/coworker to poke me every day to make sure i was doing something. it seemed and still seems like a good strategy. and then a day or two after i asked him that i just dropped off the map again
i'm not addicted to drugs or video games. it seems like i ought to be. i am a bit drunk right now, but that is quite irregular
recently, i thought i'd finally made a close friend. this morning, she broke up with me and blocked me for a really really stupid reason. i am really hurt by that, and it makes me feel a bit hopeless about the whole thing. spent the afternoon crying about it and now just feel a bit numb. i give it decent odds she comes back, but. i know one problem i have is putting my eggs in too few baskets. but there are so few baskets that seem worth investing in, and investment is so hard
she suggested i try to get prescribed add medication for my work problems, and was going to give me some illicitly to see if it helped. the latter is not happening anymore, of course. and i cannot stomach the medical system (already i have other things i have been putting off talking to my doctor about for a while), not to mention that it would take forever to do anything for me
i don't know what to do in the short to medium term. i don't know what to say to my work that i haven't said already, other than: clearly, i am just incapable of doing this. i am not super financially stable right now, and being without a job seems like a bad idea
54 votes -
Office retreat gone awry: Worker rescued after allegedly left stranded on Colorado mountain by colleagues
38 votes -
American teachers are burning out on the job
46 votes -
What do you actually do at work?
I’m a young student, and I’m going to start 6th form in 2 weeks (taking maths, further maths, physics and computer science). With this approaching change to my life, I realised that soon I will...
I’m a young student, and I’m going to start 6th form in 2 weeks (taking maths, further maths, physics and computer science). With this approaching change to my life, I realised that soon I will have to make large decisions which will affect my future career. Despite this, I have little knowledge of what most people do day to day for their jobs, with my knowledge practically limited to a basic understanding of my mother’s work.
For my sake, and that of any other young tildes users, could you explain, without any assumption of previous understanding, what you do at your job, and what that involves.
57 votes -
Australians get 'right to disconnect' after working hours
46 votes -
Valve handbook for new employees — first edition
38 votes -
Nothing CEO Carl Pei gives employees two months to return to office full-time
34 votes -
Quitting my job for the way of pain
51 votes -
"A total of 203,946 employees have been laid off across more than 165 tech companies worldwide since the start of 2024, with firms such as Dell, Intel, and Tesla leading the cuts"
77 votes -
Advice for networking at a conference?
So in about two weeks I'll be at a conference for a career path that I've been trying my best to get into for two years. It's a bit niche, having an overlap with science, tech and IT. As such this...
So in about two weeks I'll be at a conference for a career path that I've been trying my best to get into for two years. It's a bit niche, having an overlap with science, tech and IT.
As such this conference represents opportunity for me, and given how low my morale is after rejection after rejection after rejection, something I really hope to see some result from.
Does anyone have any tips on how to network at such a conference?
22 votes -
Report reveals how workers got sick while cleaning up East Palestine derailment site
14 votes -
Danish wind power giant Ørsted delays major US offshore project – news follows scrapping of two other Atlantic windfarms and axing of hundreds of jobs as costs surge
7 votes -
No-car Games: Los Angeles Olympic venues will only be accessible by public transportation
34 votes -
Customers didn’t stop spending. Companies stopped serving.
61 votes -
Branch fires team behind Android launcher Nova, only the founder remains
41 votes -
How viable is indie game development these days?
With all the talk of layoffs and studio closures, I wanted to know what the opinions and general experience is like as an indie game dev. How viable is it, how successful can you really be with...
With all the talk of layoffs and studio closures, I wanted to know what the opinions and general experience is like as an indie game dev. How viable is it, how successful can you really be with that career and what challenges can crop up?
I started making my own game a while back and got extremely discouraged by the layoffs and technical hurdles I was running into, to the point where someone told me maybe I wasn't cut out for it on discord. This really killed my drive, and it would be awesome to hear about some success stories or even some struggles that you may have overcome.
20 votes -
Meta closes down first-party Quest studio Ready at Dawn Studios
15 votes -
Intel is laying off over 15,000 employees and will stop ‘non-essential work’
57 votes -
GameStop kills Game Informer magazine and takes website offline
11 votes -
Why is it so expensive to make games in the United States?
14 votes