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Would you hire me?

posted Thursday, 17 August 2006
Recently, I was talking to a couple of  Java guys about what to put and what not in the resume (CV). One of them said: "I do not know, because I do not have a resume. I have more work than I can handle, and if I need  cash, I just announce that I'm available".
I was really impressed!  Of course, he is not an average Java developer, but a well known person in the industry. But still...

During the last year or so, if I need to interview a job applicant for a senior position, I spend about 30 seconds skimming through his/her resume. Yeah, yeah, yeah...same old, same old: J2EE, Struts, EJB, design patterns... developed, lead, participated. I am not sure though, if knowledge of Struts and design patterns is a plus or a minus, but it's irrelevant for this discussion.   Then, I go to Google and key in the name of the job applicant. If I see some activity there, I consider it  a huge plus.  If the person blogs, you can get a feeling of the temper and attitude of this person. Knowing Java is good, but if this is a nasty person, would you want to spend eight hours a day with this guy/gal?   If s/he participates in the technical forums, you can have an idea about the technical abilities and interests of the candidate.

A couple of days ago,  James McGovern blogged about how to hire  a consultant, and he thinks  the same way.  Internet can help you in making this kind of a decision.  He talks about consultants only, but I do not see why the same approach would not work for employees?

Hiring is about finding capable people with the personality and attitude that fits your organization. It's not about people who know a particular API or a framework. 

Let's take  J2EE APIs.  I did not have a chance to work with Java Connectors (JCA).   Would this stop you from  hiring  me for  developing an application  that  heavily relies on JCA?  I know Java and the rest of J2EE. Don't you think that I can pick it up pretty fast, and can contribute to your project in other ways without being the JCA expert?

So let's get back to my original question,   "Would you hire me without seeing my resume?".  Google my name, and it'll bring you enough technical and  non-technical  materials that would  give you an idea  of my personality and abilities.  I'm sure that there are people who do not like me, but there are people who do. The fact that there are people who subscribe to my blog tells me that some  people  want to hear  my opinion (I've got plenty of those) on a regular basis. This does not mean that they like me, but they are interested in my opinion.

So here I am again:  if you want to hire me, please send me the following: the cIty and the country where you want me  work, the project and my role's  description, and how much are you willing to pay.   I'm not going to show you my resume, and I'm not going to go through  technical interviews. 

Are you up to the challenge?

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1. L.G. left...
Thursday, 17 August 2006 11:56 am

>I'm not going to show you my resume, and I'm not going to go through technical interviews.

Hmmm... Inversion of Control pattern :)


2. Yakov Fain left...
Thursday, 17 August 2006 12:03 pm

L.G., this is funny :)


3. L.G. left...
Thursday, 17 August 2006 12:31 pm

>L.G., this is funny :)

I can be funny sometimes. If you remember you removed my entry regarding your question about how to make quick money ;) I don't mind, I understand... You can remove this one too. No hard feelings :)


4. Dave Paglia left...
Friday, 18 August 2006 2:57 pm

Client is Bank of America, NYC. Job is for a super high level Java Swing Guru. They are looking for someone with capital markets experience and possibly some trading systems experience. The big thing for them on this 2 year project is Swing (write code, mentor others and written books on it). Compensation is flexible but will be based off experience. If this is not the right job for you, I would be very appreciative if you could pass along to others that you may feel are suitable.


5. Norman left...
Sunday, 27 August 2006 9:20 am

Got to love the job ads (fictitious or not) ...

"Compensation flexible but based on experience." Salary range is 75K to 150K but we'll throw some arcane question in the tech so that we can claim that you are not a guru and therefore pay you 80K even though you are more than capable of developing our simple application...

"Java Swing Guru" ... "capital markets experience" A GUI is a GUI, do you need a Swing programmer or someone to interact with your business people and spec/write the project business and functional requirements?

BTW Back in the late 90's I worked in a group with a published author who could not code if his life depended on it. Yes he had written a book on Java, and yes he was canned.