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Each company has a unique culture that is communicated through their job requirements, expectations from their employees and internal communication processes.
Remote work, and the mass millennial shift in mindset that came with that trend, affords today's idea economy professionals the privilege to pick and choose between companies and get into the one that is most in line with their internal values.
Be that as it may: it's still pretty hard to understand the culture from outside.
In the age of Instagram-perfect job feeds and profiles, it's really hard to really see what are you going into when you start to work for a company.
Of course, eventually, you'll get the grip of their culture but if it doesn't fit you, it means that at least a few months went in vain. Your time was wasted, the employer's time was wasted as well.
Ever since I started doing freelancing had around 30 jobs (short-term small tasks and 2 big projects) and I've met different kinds of customers, employers and project managers. And I developed a set of questions that will help me to remotely understand the culture of the company to cut out the ones that definitely won't fit.
To be clear, here are the things I'm looking for in a potential employer:
Here are 6 questions that help me understand the culture during the initial stages that are red flags for me when I'm already working (or in probation).
This question is very important. Be it a startup or a more corporate company, the answer to these questions means a lot.
This question reveals if the company is obsessed with methodologies.
i.e. Do they stick to one fundamental practice and make a few incremental changes to align with the needs of their team, or do they try every new thing that comes out every month?
I've worked with few teams that one day we were working with a kanban board, then 2 weeks later changed their board models, after they implemented a mix between scrum and kanban.
In the meantime, we were asked to update all boards no matter we were using them or now. This eats up a lot of time and you're not focused on the development process, but to have all your boards set up for your next retrospective or any other meeting like that.
If they say they're constantly trying new things that's a red flag for me.
There are a lot of tools that help to manage the processes, especially for remote teams.
Most popular combinations of tools to manage remote teams are:
Knowing their tools at the very least shows what are you familiar with and what you need to learn, and also if they have too many lists/task management boards and integrations this also can be a sign that did not set up the project management process.
Oh, I love this question.
One of the main reasons is that not every recruiter expects to hear this question from a developer.
From the cultural point of view, it perfectly shows how agile/lean the company is.
Do they have 1 or 2 key people that work on a product; do they have a dedicated product manager and strategy that clearly sets the product development expectations and process?
Or maybe they have zillions of committees that need to approve each and every step, the outcome of which may change your task a couple of tasks.
Noting is more frustrating than to work on a specific feature and then to throw it all away because a new decision was made and your feature is no longer relevant.
Are you out and about in the wild all alone? How often you need to communicate your work in progress? Who's the person you're reporting too? Who's reviewing your code/pull requests?
Essential and simple things that each new recruit should know. During communication calls you're getting information about the product development strategy, are (hopefully) communicated with company goals and strategies.
Being on the same page as everyone is crucial for each remote worker, especially a developer.
Another big thing that reveals how productive your work will be is how fast you will get in touch with their processes and integrate with them.
As a software engineer, you need to know their release dates, what branches to work on, how's their pipeline. If you have to figure out things on your own it means there's a chance to break their system a few times (I know I did).
So, if the employer is expecting you to understand everything through a magical process of knowing it all then maybe it's not the best place.
Also, if they expect you to set up the process, it also means that you'll have less time on coding and more time on process management.
These are the examples that can be used during each interview, however, as everyone has different perspectives and boundaries, I do acknowledge that there's no singular recipe that will fit everyone's requirements.
What are your favorite questions to ask interviewers? Let me know in the comments, and good luck with your job hunt!
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