What the hell is going on with trying to recruit high-quality staff these days?
We’re following our usual tried and tested method. We get CVs submitted, we screen the CVs, we then do an introductory phone screening assessment, people who pass that come in for a full face-to-face interview and some technical tests.
Out of the five candidates we’ve interviewed over the last two weeks, four have absolutely crashed and burned on the technical tests despite their CVs and interviews stating that they had the relevant skills. Two absolutely crashed and burned in the interview as well, but since we had them in, we thought we may as well get them to do the tests.
We’re left witn one candidate who doesn’t meet all of our requirements but might be okay. This is from a pool of probably in excess of 100 CVs.
People who claim to have Linux and SQL experience really shouldn’t struggle with writing an extremely basic select query or with identifying simple Linux commands. I‘m talking “select <columns> from <table> where length of string less than seven“ here. I honestly don’t mind if people are missing those skills, we’re looking for diagnosticians who can really get a grip on nasty problems so the rest we can train, but don’t lie about your skills FFS.
What the hell is going on, are you guys finding the same thing? Is it that people are just now so reliant on Google and ChatGPT that nobody is actually learning any skills?
Anyway, if anybody knows of a decent candidate who wants a hybrid role (two days in the office) based in Bristol as a senior tech support analyst slide into my DMs. It’s genuinely a pretty good company to work for, a nice environment and good people. Fintech experience preferred, but the single most important things are they must be experienced and comfortable diagnosing and working on complex bespoke applications where you cannot simply google the answer.