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Interview Questions Cheat Sheet

Attributions:

Edward O'Campo-Gooding's list of questions.

Julia Evans' blog post "Questions I'm asking in interviews".

Thanks to @bmastenbrook, @marcprecipice, @danluu, @kelseyinnis, @zmagg, @graue, and @ircolle for awesome question suggestions (per Julia).

"Useless" questions vs concrete questions

  • Do you have smart people?
  • Can I learn a lot at your company?
  • Ask questions where you can get a definitive answer

I'm also mostly not asking about principles, but the way things are -- not "do you think code review is important?", but "Does all code get reviewed?".

Guidelines

  • Don’t ask all of these in first interviews.
  • Use your discretion, and do what you feel comfortable doing.
  • Asking a lot of questions shows that you value yourself and that you’re careful when making decisions. It’s a good thing.
  • If you have an offer, you can schedule extra conversations if you feel that not all of your questions have been answered.
  • It can be worth asking the same question to more than one person.

Find a way to ask this questions gracefully

  • Who decides what features get built?
  • Who are the people at your company with a lot of depth of experience? Will I be able to talk to them?

Engineering practices

  • Do you use version control? (if not, the interview should be over =))
  • Do you test your code?
  • How do you make sure that all code is understood by more than one person?
  • Do you do code review? Does all code get reviewed?
  • Do you have an issue tracker?
  • Describe your deployment process -- how do you find bugs in your team's code? What recourse do you have when you find a serious bug in production code?
  • Who is responsible for doing deployment? How often do you deploy?
  • How do you think about code correctness?
  • When something goes wrong, how do you handle it? Do devs get shamed for breaking the build?
  • How/when do developers talk to non-developers? Is it easy to talk to the people who are will be using your product?
  • Can I see some code the team I'm interviewing for has written? (from an open-source project you work on, for example)
  • Who are the people at your company with a lot of depth of experience? Will I be able to talk to them?
  • What’s your approach to technical debt?

Management style

  • How does engineering work get assigned?
  • How are technical decisions made and communicated?
  • How do you balance support work and feature development?
  • Can you give me an example of someone who’s been in a technical role at your company for a long time, and how their responsibilities and role have changed? (I love this question)
  • Do you have a dedicated designer? QA? Technical writer? Dev manager?
  • How often do you have meetings? Are there any scheduled/standing meetings? Who talks to customers (if appropriate) and how?
  • Has there been a situation where someone raised an ethical concern? If so, how was it handled? If not, have there really not been any?
  • How are decisions made? Is architecture dictated top down? Are ideas from anyone welcomed? If so, in what scope/context?
  • How are disagreements solved - both technical disagreements and other kinds? What happens when personalities clash?
  • Can you tell me about a time when you’ve had to let someone go?
  • Is there a written roadmap all developers can see? How far into the future does it extend? How closely is it followed?
  • How is performance evaluated?

Quality of life

  • How much vacation do people get? If there’s “unlimited” vacation, how much vacation do people normally take?
  • Is it possible to take sabbaticals or unpaid vacation?
  • How many women work for you? What’s your process for making sure you have diversity in other ways?
  • How many hours do people work in an average week? In your busiest weeks?
  • Is variability tolerated or is everyone expected to be on the same schedule?
  • What time do people normally leave work?
  • Would I need to be on call? How often?
  • How often are there emergencies or times when people have to work extra hours?
  • What is your turnover rate like? How many devs were hired last year and how many left?
  • What’s your retention rate of women over 1.5 years? Do you think you could’ve done anything differently to keep people who left?
  • Do people work on the weekend?
  • Do people check in when they’re on vacation? How often?
  • Is it possible to work from home, say, 1 or 2 days a week? Does anyone do this? (can be a nice option to have)
  • Does this position require travel? How often?

As many of these as possible are "statistical" questions -- a company may say that they "don't have hours", but if everyone leaves at 9pm that's not a good sign.

Community involvement

  • Do you contribute to open source projects? Which projects? Which teams work on open source? Do you work mostly in the community or do you have a private fork?
  • Do your employees speak at conferences about your work?

Career development

  • Are employees encouraged to go speak at conferences?
  • Do you cover travel to conferences? How many conferences a year do devs typically go to?
  • Does your company support continuing education? (will they pay for employees to do a master’s degree?)
  • In what other ways do you support career development?

Culture

  • How do you determine if someone is a poor fit for your company?
  • How are your teams structured? What is the management structure like?
  • How often do you pair? What’s pairing like? How often do inexperienced people work directly with experienced people?
  • What’s the onboarding process like?
  • Is there any sort of institutionalized way of dealing with plateauing or preventing burnout? (Expecting to hear about rotation of duties or location, sabbaticals.)
  • Is it easy to move to other divisions or offices?
  • How does internal communication work? This one is super important and I need to remember to ask it more.
  • Are there catered suppers? (possibly bad)
  • How many hours a week does senior management work? Do they put in 80-hour weeks?

Financials/business model/growth

  • Are you profitable?
    • if not, how does this affect what you can do? What’s your planned timeline for becoming profitable?
  • How do you make money? (I often explain to my parents or non-technical friends companies' business models to test if they really make sense.)
  • How much are you planning to hire in the next year?
  • Are company financials, minus salaries, transparent throughout the company?

Things to look for in real life

  • How is the office space physically organized?

Other

  • Can you tell me about how the interview process is structured? How many interviews are there?
  • How often do you offer above asking? Can I speak with someone who got such an offer?
  • What do you wish you had known when you joined this company?
  • Why did you choose to join this company?
  • What’s the single biggest issue or problem facing the team/department/company?” What’s currently being done to address it?

Sumary: Interviewing is hard! Ultimately, you're trying to determine:

  • do people treat each other well?
  • do you work reasonable hours?
  • do you care about the work that you do, and keep trying to do it better?
  • do you only hire excellent human beings?
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