本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛3.3 Land a Job
Finally, I got a job from a Silicon Valley high-tech company (“SV”). It was a hard process. The on-campus interview was such a failure, but I got the on-site because I won behavior interviews. I know it.
It was the spring semester of 2002. With the pressure of visa status, I did not have any choices, but to land a job. I did not limit my job-hunting to banks; I started to look for technology jobs. I prepared my resume exactly as what was required in SV’s job posting. Surprisingly, I got the on-campus interview. The technical part was a disaster. I could not write quickly how to delete a note in a link-list, the basic stuff in data structure. The interviewer gave me a lot of guidance and I finally got it. I was scared, because I sensed that I would fail again.
Next he asked me a behavior question, “what is your favorite project?”
My answer (I don’t remember it clearly): I have to say my favorite project is ABC. First, it involved learning and applying the state-of-art technology such as A, B, and C. I got the opportunity to learn a lot of new things within a very short period of time in order to meet the deadline. I felt excited because I am willing to learn news things all the time. Second, it was a real world project for a client XYZ, which required a lot of project management and client interaction. We followed the project plan and milestones, practice timely communication with the client to develop specification and collect feedback. I got the opportunities to develop strong communication and project management skills. Third, I had the opportunity to work with a strong team. We helped each other to meet each milestone and learned a lot from each other...”
In this small question, I presented to him something very important in a candidate: 1) the strong interest to learn new technology; 2) good communication and people skills; and 3) a strong team player (remember you always have to work in a team environment in a corporation).
Believe it or not, I got the on-site interview, which I did not expect. I was actually very depressed, because I did not do well in technical questions.
Before I talked about my on-site interview, I wanted to tell you another story. My Indian friend went to on-site interview with the same company during the fall semester 2001. I told you earlier that he had a chemical engineering bachelor degree and one year experience in IT. The interviewer asked him, “Do you see the guy (who is also an Indian.) who just left? I will not recruit him. First, he does not have a computer science background. Second, he never took Data Structure. You two have similar backgrounds. Why should I hire you?” My friend seemed a bit emotional; he said, “I gradated from the best university in India – IIT. The competition was intensive and the students who stand out are the best in India and all have strong learning ability. After I graduated from school, I got a job in the United States as a software engineer where I proved myself again as a quick learner with strong performance. I got straight A+ in all my course work so far. I never knew before what is distributed technology, J2EE, and so many other technology, but I am the best in the class. Whenever I have a strong focus, I am able to grasp the concept and technology very quickly and excel in the group. I believe I will have no problem to understand Data Structure within one-month.” After several questions, the interviewer apparently liked him, but told him, “I will give you the on-site interview, but remember those who will interview you on-site are not business people. You have to know all the technical questions they asked.”
See, how important behavior questions are. It could save you from your bad performance on technical questions.
There was about one-month before the on-site interview. I was working crazy to prepare the interview. It might be my last chance. I know it is a very technical position. One month later, I could say, I knew everything. I might even be able to get a job at Microsoft. I studied so hard. I knew all the C++ and IT questions from the Internet, and I studied Data Structure systematically one more time. The night before the interview was a nightmare; I could not fall asleep until 4:00 am. Anyway, I did it. I answered most of the tough technical questions and I did very well in behavior questions. I conveyed strongly the message that I am a strong team player, I have strong personal skills, and I would always put the company and the client in the first place.
4 Lay-Off
Seven days after I started working in the company, I got laid off, together with almost all the other new hires from the top computer science schools in the United States. The rumor of laying-off was spread during the first week, but nobody expected that new hires would get laid-off. I tried not to cry when my manager notified me about the laif-off in his office. It was hard. My roommate and I spent a month buying furniture and getting settled down, and we got laid-off within one-week. My feeling toward California was a mix. I like the place, but I hate the company.更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
Finally, I got a job from a Silicon Valley high-tech company (“SV”). It was a hard process. The on-campus interview was such a failure, but I got the on-site because I won behavior interviews. I know it.
It was the spring semester of 2002. With the pressure of visa status, I did not have any choices, but to land a job. I did not limit my job-hunting to banks; I started to look for technology jobs. I prepared my resume exactly as what was required in SV’s job posting. Surprisingly, I got the on-campus interview. The technical part was a disaster. I could not write quickly how to delete a note in a link-list, the basic stuff in data structure. The interviewer gave me a lot of guidance and I finally got it. I was scared, because I sensed that I would fail again.
Next he asked me a behavior question, “what is your favorite project?”
My answer (I don’t remember it clearly): I have to say my favorite project is ABC. First, it involved learning and applying the state-of-art technology such as A, B, and C. I got the opportunity to learn a lot of new things within a very short period of time in order to meet the deadline. I felt excited because I am willing to learn news things all the time. Second, it was a real world project for a client XYZ, which required a lot of project management and client interaction. We followed the project plan and milestones, practice timely communication with the client to develop specification and collect feedback. I got the opportunities to develop strong communication and project management skills. Third, I had the opportunity to work with a strong team. We helped each other to meet each milestone and learned a lot from each other...”
In this small question, I presented to him something very important in a candidate: 1) the strong interest to learn new technology; 2) good communication and people skills; and 3) a strong team player (remember you always have to work in a team environment in a corporation).
Believe it or not, I got the on-site interview, which I did not expect. I was actually very depressed, because I did not do well in technical questions.
Before I talked about my on-site interview, I wanted to tell you another story. My Indian friend went to on-site interview with the same company during the fall semester 2001. I told you earlier that he had a chemical engineering bachelor degree and one year experience in IT. The interviewer asked him, “Do you see the guy (who is also an Indian.) who just left? I will not recruit him. First, he does not have a computer science background. Second, he never took Data Structure. You two have similar backgrounds. Why should I hire you?” My friend seemed a bit emotional; he said, “I gradated from the best university in India – IIT. The competition was intensive and the students who stand out are the best in India and all have strong learning ability. After I graduated from school, I got a job in the United States as a software engineer where I proved myself again as a quick learner with strong performance. I got straight A+ in all my course work so far. I never knew before what is distributed technology, J2EE, and so many other technology, but I am the best in the class. Whenever I have a strong focus, I am able to grasp the concept and technology very quickly and excel in the group. I believe I will have no problem to understand Data Structure within one-month.” After several questions, the interviewer apparently liked him, but told him, “I will give you the on-site interview, but remember those who will interview you on-site are not business people. You have to know all the technical questions they asked.”
See, how important behavior questions are. It could save you from your bad performance on technical questions.
There was about one-month before the on-site interview. I was working crazy to prepare the interview. It might be my last chance. I know it is a very technical position. One month later, I could say, I knew everything. I might even be able to get a job at Microsoft. I studied so hard. I knew all the C++ and IT questions from the Internet, and I studied Data Structure systematically one more time. The night before the interview was a nightmare; I could not fall asleep until 4:00 am. Anyway, I did it. I answered most of the tough technical questions and I did very well in behavior questions. I conveyed strongly the message that I am a strong team player, I have strong personal skills, and I would always put the company and the client in the first place.
4 Lay-Off
Seven days after I started working in the company, I got laid off, together with almost all the other new hires from the top computer science schools in the United States. The rumor of laying-off was spread during the first week, but nobody expected that new hires would get laid-off. I tried not to cry when my manager notified me about the laif-off in his office. It was hard. My roommate and I spent a month buying furniture and getting settled down, and we got laid-off within one-week. My feeling toward California was a mix. I like the place, but I hate the company.更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net