Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit login

It is worse: your attempt to clarify the question may be regarded by some interviewers as a sign you are not senior dev (they think [erroneously in my opinion] that "senior" means that you must figure out fine details yourself).



This seems odd to me, though its entirely possible my experience thus far hasn't been this. I've been told at the last 3 places I worked that one of the reasons I was hired was how inquisitive I was during the interview stage, asking lots of questions before coming up with solutions

I am most definitely not ruling out what you're saying may be common case and I am just very lucky, but I do want to act as a sort of counter point to see if others can weigh in so we can get more of an industry sense around this


Anecdatum: my experience has been the same as others - asking questions about the interview questions generally leads to a bad outcome. In 25 years, I reckon it's less than a handful of times where asking questions of the interviewers has actually got a positive response.

Hell, even when in jobs, asking questions about projects I'm assigned has sometimes got a negative response...


Seems weird to me that asking a specific question about what it is you're trying to achieve would be negative. Especially since most interviews often open with feel free to ask clarifying questions or something along those lines.

If the prompt is unclear its worth getting clarity, just like if something is unclear in the job you seek clarity, I feel like people not asking questions would be a big red flag.

of course, asking too many (this is subjective but I think we can all think of a reasonable situation where there were too many questions being asked relative to their value) could be a red flag


> just like if something is unclear in the job you seek clarity

There are a distressing number of managers / leads I have encountered who consider that if you're asking for clarity, you're impugning their powers of explanation because CLEARLY they explained it well enough (after all, they understand it!) and you're either an idiot or being sarcastic to undermine them.


Could it be because the clarification questions are perceived as not understanding? Would it help if one prefaced with something like "Well, there's many different ways like X, Y and Z and the best one depends on the details of the requirements. Did you have something specific in mind and if so what are those requirements?"

By mentioning a few ways you'd show you're aware of various solutions, and you'd also provide context for why you're asking probing questions.

Then again, I haven't interviewed in quite a while (love my current job) so...


> Could it be because the clarification questions are perceived as not understanding?

Sure but taking that as "the asker is an idiot" rather than "I may not have explained this well" is all too common (I know I've been guilty of this more than a handful of times.)

> Would it help if one prefaced with something like [...]

I think if you're having to carefully phrase your (reasonable, obvs.) questions in order to avoid upsetting the interviewer, that's a bit of a red flag, no?


When I interviewed for software development, I used to have a very open-ended question about optimizing a system I would describe, and there was no right answer, there were tons of directions to go in, and the point was to get the interviewee to ask questions so I could figure out if they'd been around the block and which blocks they had been around.

Why would you only want cookie-cutter "correct" answers to your questions? That doesn't tell you shit about the candidate?


One a rare occasion I actually got feedback after the interview (it was for a startup), It was because I asked 'too many questions' it was decided that I'd need way more mentoring than they can afford for the senior position I was applying for.


That's infuriating. There's a clear distinction between asking "how do I do this thing?" and "what do you want me to do?"

I can't read your mind, and that goes both for interview questions and determining product needs.




Consider applying for YC's Spring batch! Applications are open till Feb 11.

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: