I watched this video the night before my interview and it 100% made a difference in the entire interview process. Got a call for an offer in 24hrs. Thank you for this video
Good questions. One thing to keep in mind is that balance of leverage in the interview process. Does the company seem to really want you? Are you comfortable passing the job up? Then you’re in a better position to ask the tough questions. If not, the tough questions may not be received well and negatively impact your candidacy. You gotta remember these are people just like you. People are petty and emotional. When you have leverage you can move with more confidence than somewhat without. I think they’re good questions to ask regardless because they show that you actually care to know if your a good fit. Just something to keep in mind.
I'm currently a manager of a count room in a casino in Las Vegas, and I can tell you that (most of)these questions would go over well where I work. Great video!
Absolutely. I'm interviewing for Tier-2 support roles and work from home flexibility and on-call rotation are 2 huge things that I'm asking about this time around. When I last interviewed 8 years ago, these things werent really big topics
Although the video is about a tech job interview, the way I see it the tips are applicable to any job at all and that is why I think that everybody would benefit from watching this clip! I straight up shared it at my facebook page, because I thought that it was that good! :)
Thanks! It's not nearly as popular as "which interview questions to expect," but I think it's much more important in terms of peoples' long-term success in this industry.
I wish I watched this video before I got hired. These are great questions and I'm definitely going to ask them going into this hire. Thanks. I truly appreciate these videos on stuff other than technical topics.
wow, what great insight i have gained from this Dave!. I wish i had learned this stuff years ago and saved myself years of pain working for rubbish companies. Many thanks
I'm interviewing currently and the question about work from home is sometimes misleading. I found some companies that have restrictive policies ask employees to work from a set time but not beyond that time in the office. While other companies might have more flexible work from home schedules, they might encourage late night work since everyone else is also online. It's not a which is better, but more about which fits your work style.
Yeah, that's a definite drawback of WFH, and about not being able to see what's really happening in a company before you join. Avoiding 'always online' work cultures (even if it's in the 'everyone is really helpful!' context) is really important.
I just want to thank you so much for all you great content of videos that you are sharing with us! It's just approves me that we all need to help other people and make this world a better place! Keep your great work , I wish you all the best in your interpersonal life :)
This is perfect. I usually ask if there is a training program, work culture and working from home. I will definitely add some of these. Very well thought out video.
Another Good one. One of your other videos helped me through my first few interviews with the first tech company to email back and these are some awesome additions. You do good work and are a huge help. Thanks, Mick
Also important indicator of if there is "Constant improvement culture": Q: how many of tickets opened by your team for process improvement got closed/rejected with "Won't do" status last year by Devs?
Thanks for sharing these great ideas and reminding us that the onus is on the interviewee to shift the focus on getting to know the interviewer as well.
Interesting but I think that it's so competitive that likely if you pry too much the company will ghost you because there's always 20 more fresh out of college or fresh out of bootcamp candidates.
Another for Operations/DevOps vs Devs realationship: Q: Does top management supoort Devs to do rotating on-calls escalation for software they have written? If not - that's a really bad sign, that DevOps approach is not there and you as Ops/SRE going to suffer.
So...6 minutes in I've decided that you're now the Rafiki (that Yoda monkey from Lion King) of my life. Perhaps this is just the noob in me but this video really lets me know you give a fck about the folks you're helping with your videos. Gonna share THE FCK out of these videos :D
I like the info, but do you think these would "work" if someone with little to no experience (or no work experience at all) asked them? say, if someone who's still in college asked these, don't you think he would appear as nit-picky? or give a bad impression? I kind of get the impression that if it's someone considering a job change (from another company or field), these would make a better impression for someone who's never had a job, I think simpler questions could make a better impression, take the mentoring one for example, if I instead asked "what are the personal growth opportunities here? is there a feedback mechanism between management and technical workers?", it sounds more like the sort of thing someone without experience would ask (in the way it's "worded") that would still make a good impression thanks for the video, if possible I'd like you thoughts on this
Those are great, thanks for sharing. I completely agree -- you've got to read the room before you just unleash a torrent of questions that could be mistaken for arrogant.
rephrasing question about # of interviews into Management speak: What's voluntary churn rate in your team vs company overall? If it is > 25% run! if it is 40%+ express condolences and leave interview immediately!
cool stuff .YOUR MATERIALS INTRODUCED ME TO LiNUX, am building myself now. thanks man!!, but the batch scripting part was very boring . if you have a more elaborate video on batch scripting please let me know please
super useful. Pretty sure i just bombed an interview that i would have been perfect for.. all because they were expecting me to ask all sorts of questions interviewing is the fucking worst
Thanks Dave.. I'm jobless currently with 3 years of experience as process executive. I saw all ur videos on Linux and aspiring to change my career. Is it possible to change my career path now? What interviews should I give to become a devops engineer. Really hoping for a reply.
Yes, it's always possible to change careers. If you like tech, start learning on your own, try building a few small practice projects in whatever field you're interested in, and then start looking at job ads and studying the material they say they require. Each market is different, so you'll need to prep in slightly different ways depending on where in the world you are. Your best bet is to make some friends in your area and start asking them for advice, while learning as much as you can on your own. Tech is very self-directed, and your best learning will come from solving problems yourself. If you really have a desire to do it, you absolutely can!
As much as I love the questions + video... I am still in the middle of looking for entry-level dev job and I wonder if this is appropriate to ask for someone who is just looking to get in first. :( any tips?
Yes, if for no other reason than the mindset shift Dave spoke about early on in the video. You do not want to seem desperate during this process. You don't need to be cocky or full of yourself either, but seeing the interview as a two-way street changes the tone of the whole thing in a positive way. I know that can be difficult if you are actually feeling desperate or are in a desperate situation, but it's worth pushing through those feelings to get into this kind of mindset.
You remind me a guy I work with he is super intelligent in Windows servers VMware but hate management specially the management not flexible with work remotely
Best first two minutes I've ever watched on RUclips.. Derek Jeter's last at bat might beat it, so might Tiger Woods, Concert livestreams+, and of course educational videos... but other than that., ... you know what I mean. Just de-stressed for Network analyst position when I'm a Security professional..and gave some great questions that I will definitely use...
I can't believe there's only 258 likes. People are so lazy. Great stuff though and I especially like the tech debt, firefighting & old (soft|hard)ware questions. From experience these tend to be major indicators of how the tech team(s) are viewed and treated by management.
I watched this video the night before my interview and it 100% made a difference in the entire interview process. Got a call for an offer in 24hrs. Thank you for this video
Good questions. One thing to keep in mind is that balance of leverage in the interview process. Does the company seem to really want you? Are you comfortable passing the job up? Then you’re in a better position to ask the tough questions. If not, the tough questions may not be received well and negatively impact your candidacy. You gotta remember these are people just like you. People are petty and emotional. When you have leverage you can move with more confidence than somewhat without. I think they’re good questions to ask regardless because they show that you actually care to know if your a good fit. Just something to keep in mind.
I'm currently a manager of a count room in a casino in Las Vegas, and I can tell you that (most of)these questions would go over well where I work. Great video!
Absolutely. I'm interviewing for Tier-2 support roles and work from home flexibility and on-call rotation are 2 huge things that I'm asking about this time around. When I last interviewed 8 years ago, these things werent really big topics
One of the very few interviews guides that's actually helpful and insightful. You just earned a new sub!
If I can add one I saw on reddit recently: "What was your company's response to COVID-19?"
Although the video is about a tech job interview, the way I see it the tips are applicable to any job at all and that is why I think that everybody would benefit from watching this clip! I straight up shared it at my facebook page, because I thought that it was that good! :)
One of the greatest, freshest videos on tech interviewing that I have seen in a long time. Thanks for making it!
Thanks! It's not nearly as popular as "which interview questions to expect," but I think it's much more important in terms of peoples' long-term success in this industry.
I have my third interview tomorrow. Thank you so much for this!
Simply amazing; this information is golden! Thanks again Dave!
Probably the best 15 minutes I spent in RUclips.
Thank you very much for this one :)
I wish I watched this video before I got hired. These are great questions and I'm definitely going to ask them going into this hire. Thanks. I truly appreciate these videos on stuff other than technical topics.
I'd been in a lot of interviews but your advice is really great! more videos please
wow, what great insight i have gained from this Dave!. I wish i had learned this stuff years ago and saved myself years of pain working for rubbish companies. Many thanks
I just realized a first interview is a first date
And a first date is a first interview
This is the first time in a long time I’ve heard something else than a tech lemming opinion. Refreshing!
I'm interviewing currently and the question about work from home is sometimes misleading. I found some companies that have restrictive policies ask employees to work from a set time but not beyond that time in the office. While other companies might have more flexible work from home schedules, they might encourage late night work since everyone else is also online. It's not a which is better, but more about which fits your work style.
Yeah, that's a definite drawback of WFH, and about not being able to see what's really happening in a company before you join. Avoiding 'always online' work cultures (even if it's in the 'everyone is really helpful!' context) is really important.
_Super_ important stuff there. Thanks ...
I just want to thank you so much for all you great content of videos that you are sharing with us!
It's just approves me that we all need to help other people and make this world a better place!
Keep your great work , I wish you all the best in your interpersonal life :)
These are great questions for a senior role and I will use them some day!
This is perfect.
I usually ask if there is a training program, work culture and working from home. I will definitely add some of these.
Very well thought out video.
Another Good one. One of your other videos helped me through my first few interviews with the first tech company to email back and these are some awesome additions.
You do good work and are a huge help.
Thanks,
Mick
Also important indicator of if there is "Constant improvement culture": Q: how many of tickets opened by your team for process improvement got closed/rejected with "Won't do" status last year by Devs?
Thanks for sharing these great ideas and reminding us that the onus is on the interviewee to shift the focus on getting to know the interviewer as well.
Really good questions to ask, practically timeless questions as well! Thank you!
Thanks a bunch for the advice. Never thought about interviewing process from different prospective.
Interesting but I think that it's so competitive that likely if you pry too much the company will ghost you because there's always 20 more fresh out of college or fresh out of bootcamp candidates.
Than do you really want to work at such a company?
Another for Operations/DevOps vs Devs realationship: Q: Does top management supoort Devs to do rotating on-calls escalation for software they have written? If not - that's a really bad sign, that DevOps approach is not there and you as Ops/SRE going to suffer.
Great questions and tips, thank you!
This video is pure gold.
this video and the one of technical debt shows your great mindset .. love it
So very useful! Thank you!
I just used some of these in an interview - thanks for sharing! :)
So glad I found this right before my final Sysadmin interview! Thank you!
How did it go? You got the job?
So...6 minutes in I've decided that you're now the Rafiki (that Yoda monkey from Lion King) of my life. Perhaps this is just the noob in me but this video really lets me know you give a fck about the folks you're helping with your videos. Gonna share THE FCK out of these videos :D
On point and genuine questions. Thanks!
I like the info, but do you think these would "work" if someone with little to no experience (or no work experience at all) asked them?
say, if someone who's still in college asked these, don't you think he would appear as nit-picky? or give a bad impression?
I kind of get the impression that if it's someone considering a job change (from another company or field), these would make a better impression
for someone who's never had a job, I think simpler questions could make a better impression, take the mentoring one for example, if I instead asked "what are the personal growth opportunities here? is there a feedback mechanism between management and technical workers?", it sounds more like the sort of thing someone without experience would ask (in the way it's "worded") that would still make a good impression
thanks for the video, if possible I'd like you thoughts on this
Those are great, thanks for sharing. I completely agree -- you've got to read the room before you just unleash a torrent of questions that could be mistaken for arrogant.
Thank god for you. Wish I was working with you!
Very Useful Dave... Thank You for all the years you fully engaged sharing your experience with us.. Again Thank U
Thank you so much for these questions!! Great once. You saved me so much time.
I love love love this. I literally drew a blank on my way to my interview for IT Technical Support (please wish me fortune!)
Thank you for everything 🔥🔥🔥
rephrasing question about # of interviews into Management speak: What's voluntary churn rate in your team vs company overall? If it is > 25% run! if it is 40%+ express condolences and leave interview immediately!
cool stuff .YOUR MATERIALS INTRODUCED ME TO LiNUX, am building myself now. thanks man!!, but the batch scripting part was very boring . if you have a more elaborate video on batch scripting please let me know please
What diffrent between devops and sysadmin?
Thank you for providing this valuable information!
Wow i have never thought about these questions. Thanks.
super useful. Pretty sure i just bombed an interview that i would have been perfect for.. all because they were expecting me to ask all sorts of questions
interviewing is the fucking worst
a couple of these would be good for AWS interview, not sure if all of them are.
Thanks Dave.. I'm jobless currently with 3 years of experience as process executive. I saw all ur videos on Linux and aspiring to change my career. Is it possible to change my career path now? What interviews should I give to become a devops engineer. Really hoping for a reply.
Yes, it's always possible to change careers. If you like tech, start learning on your own, try building a few small practice projects in whatever field you're interested in, and then start looking at job ads and studying the material they say they require. Each market is different, so you'll need to prep in slightly different ways depending on where in the world you are. Your best bet is to make some friends in your area and start asking them for advice, while learning as much as you can on your own. Tech is very self-directed, and your best learning will come from solving problems yourself. If you really have a desire to do it, you absolutely can!
@@tutoriaLinux Thankyou.. Started my preparation and following ur vids... (a fan from India😊)
really strong video!
whats firefighting?
Super useful, many thanks!
very nice thanks
As much as I love the questions + video... I am still in the middle of looking for entry-level dev job and I wonder if this is appropriate to ask for someone who is just looking to get in first. :( any tips?
Yes, if for no other reason than the mindset shift Dave spoke about early on in the video. You do not want to seem desperate during this process. You don't need to be cocky or full of yourself either, but seeing the interview as a two-way street changes the tone of the whole thing in a positive way. I know that can be difficult if you are actually feeling desperate or are in a desperate situation, but it's worth pushing through those feelings to get into this kind of mindset.
You remind me a guy I work with he is super intelligent in Windows servers VMware but hate management specially the management not flexible with work remotely
Amazing video!! thank you :)
really appreciate this one
This is very interesting, thanks :)
Thank's Dave!
Best first two minutes I've ever watched on RUclips.. Derek Jeter's last at bat might beat it, so might Tiger Woods, Concert livestreams+, and of course educational videos... but other than that., ... you know what I mean. Just de-stressed for Network analyst position when I'm a Security professional..and gave some great questions that I will definitely use...
Thank you for this
Thanks so much
Dude, so good.
Very solid
Best best best! Great mindset, so I don't have to worry about how strong my skills are.....hey! I can log into AOL mail so just save ur comments! 😉
Awesome.
great tips
Instant Sub
Great Video
Awesome advice! Thank you.
For a second, I thought I saw Chris Pratt!
you suddenly had a different voice at the end. someone took over? : D
15:27 middle finger
I can't believe there's only 258 likes. People are so lazy.
Great stuff though and I especially like the tech debt, firefighting & old (soft|hard)ware questions. From experience these tend to be major indicators of how the tech team(s) are viewed and treated by management.
coolest? we're looking for cool at jobs now? do the job up until you're tired of it, and find another one..
wtf is firefighting?
When things are on "fire" at work and you / your team has to put out the fires metaphorically.
tl:dr
please write someone this questions
Then I should really get the f*ck out of my current job.
Whenever I hear "Whats up guys" I just wonder how that feels to women viewers.
Eh - that's not nearly as annoying as people seeing you and looking around the room for the "real" IT support person.
Yo!
asymmetric beard... that's the main topic of this video. Wasn't able to pay attention to anything else :-/
everyone giving questions ideas on youtube, literally just sits in front a camera and blabs away.. smh