If you end up looking for it you do so because you’ve learnt what you need.
“Different people, different needs”, to quote the great leader David Brent.
If you end up here eventually — interview the hiring manager and members of the team. You are the one looking!
For me personally I’ve realized that a company being listed or near IPO is usually a problem.
I’ve recently turned down a couple of interesting offers due to looming IPO.
Some might think this is odd, but the track record of my “career” is all I have to go by.
The best places I’ve worked at is where the CEO was the founder and company not listed.
This could indicate that there’s proper heart involved and in my experience usually a lot less politics, hence less bullshit.
Spot on, there's no "find good company" algorithm because the type of company I might like working for could be totally different to the type of company you or anyone else wants to work for.
It comes down to knowing yourself and what you're worth, and going into interviews with an eye to interviewing them too.
You get to a point where you don't mind anymore if you don't get that call back, because that's a mutual bullet dodged. You probably do have to have built up an industry reputation first, so there is that initiation to go through, after which people should be telling you why you have to work for them and not the other way around.
I have anecdotes of working for CEOs, unlisted, who were absolute sociopaths, which I think is a great demonstration that there's no single rule or method other than investing more time in understanding ourselves first, so we're appropriately armed when deciding whether or not we want to work for a company.
Turning down an offer or saying no to an interview is often the best thing for both parties, which is an odd concept when everyone is supposed to be grateful and enthusiastic to be employed.
If you end up looking for it you do so because you’ve learnt what you need.
“Different people, different needs”, to quote the great leader David Brent.
If you end up here eventually — interview the hiring manager and members of the team. You are the one looking!
For me personally I’ve realized that a company being listed or near IPO is usually a problem.
I’ve recently turned down a couple of interesting offers due to looming IPO. Some might think this is odd, but the track record of my “career” is all I have to go by.
The best places I’ve worked at is where the CEO was the founder and company not listed.
This could indicate that there’s proper heart involved and in my experience usually a lot less politics, hence less bullshit.
No truths here, just my own path.