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The newest extreme sport? Tech recruiting.

Protocol Workplace

Welcome back to our Workplace newsletter where we share the latest tips, tools and insights to help you stay informed about the modern tech office. Today: Recruiting in tech, the future of CTOs, and why employees are leaving.

—Amber Burton, reporter (twitter | email)

Tech recruiting: It's brutal out here

One completely obvious, totally unintentional theme has bubbled up in our reporting over the last few months: 2021 has been an absolutely brutal year for tech recruiters and tech hiring. A combination of pandemic-related changes has created a great mat of recruiting hair that will take more than some extra financial conditioner to fix.

It mostly boils down to tech workers feeling empowered in manifold ways. The last 20 months of remote work taught most people in the industry that their physical offices, so revered for years, are basically useless. The emphasis on Bay Area living, while still valuable for some, suddenly felt downright silly for those who would rather live somewhere more affordable or far less politically progressive (ahem, Texas). The Great Resignation made more workers feel comfortable quitting, as well as more willing to say no to less-than-satisfactory job offers. Tech worker unions took off for the first time in a serious way, starting with the Alphabet Workers Union in January.

While the rest of the world could barely stay above water financially, most tech companies absolutely thrived. Public companies saw their stock prices skyrocket; private companies found themselves flush with an unexpected wave of VC cash. All this additional investment meant an unprecedented demand for new hires, and more companies willing to pay higher rates.

And when the wave of demand crashed into rising worker empowerment, the little nagging flaws in recruiting processes all ballooned into real problems at the same time. Suddenly, some companies didn’t have enough qualified recruiters. The filtering systems designed to flag people with impressive company experience and specific coding skills were sometimes ignoring and rejecting the less obvious talent. The same problem applied to the interview itself: Questions optimized for the engineers who could easily solve difficult coding problems or ace a whiteboard interview ignored or rejected the talent that couldn’t. This means no fair shake for people who are neurodiverse, don’t have the time to practice whiteboarding, perform poorly under pressure or just might be brilliant coders with the assistance of Google at their fingertips.

To give you a sense of the scope of the problem, here are just a few of the stories Protocol Workplace has heard from people in tech in the last few months:

  • At Facebook, around 50% of candidates who actually received job offers in the Bay Area turned them down in the first quarter of 2021. We reviewed a memo called “Why hiring is hard right now,” which explained that Facebook failed to meet early 2021 hiring goals and that in the Bay Area and Seattle especially, yield rates for job offers were continuing to decline. The recruiting leader who wrote the memo speculated that private companies with VC cash had become newly stiff competition.
  • Around the same time, Facebook also experienced a 600% increase in one-star reviews on Glassdoor over a four-month period. According to a document reviewed by Protocol, unhappy workers were especially frustrated with their lack of work-life balance.
  • At Google, many people who interviewed for technical jobs shared frustrating experiences with the interview process itself, describing how the company will suggest people study hundreds of pages for months in preparation for initial interviews. Some of the sources who spoke to Protocol also said that they believe that Google’s reputation as an impressive place to work, in addition to the enormous scale of the recruiting, allows Google to unintentionally drag people through a long process without noticing how it might affect their lives.
  • One engineer, frustrated with the extremely low response rate to his applications, decided to create a fake resume with a stereotypically impressive list of jobs — Instagram, Zillow, Microsoft, degree from UC Berkeley. He also added in some not-so-impressive bullet points — sourcing coffee from Antarctica, connected with Reid Hoffman on LinkedIn, etc. — to see if recruiters would notice. Spoiler: They did not. The fake Angelina Lee seems to be the most-desired candidate in tech.
  • And at Stripe, which is the highest-valued VC-backed private company in the U.S. and on a truly massive hiring spree, some folks have come to Protocol with stories about having verbal offers rescinded, or feeling as if the company hired them just to fire them.

If you work in tech recruiting or hiring, or if you’re a tech worker and have a story to tell about your own recruiting or hiring experience, I would love to hear from you at akramer@protocol.com or on Signal at 610-701-1197. If you’d like to speak confidentially or anonymously, just let me know.

— Anna Kramer, reporter (twitter | email)

Is your CTO the next CEO?

Are CEO succession trends shifting? Parag Agrawal’s ascension to CEO of Twitter suggests that might be true. As technology increasingly takes the center stage in business and strategy decisions, more CTOs and tech executives will grab the top spot at tech companies and in the business world as a whole. Corporate boards are increasingly grooming CTOs as part of their CEO succession planning according to Ash Athawale, senior managing director for Robert Half’s executive search division. Tech is now considered central to core business functions across all industries, wrote my colleague Michelle Ma.

Read the full story here.

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Talk to us

Enjoy reading Protocol’s Workplace newsletter each week? Reach out to us! Protocol wants to hear your best tips, tools and hacks for our new work world. What gets you to inbox zero? Do we even do that anymore? And if you feel so inclined, tell us what you’d like to read. Reply to this email or email us directly: workplace@protocol.com.

See you in the inbox.

A year in enterprise tech

We spent the year looking for enterprise tech to save us from our new hybrid work lives. Join Protocol for a panel discussion with enterprise executives about the biggest developments in the technology and what trends are expected to follow in 2022. Editor Tom Krazit will be joined by Sheila Gulati, managing director at Tola Capital; Corey Quinn, chief cloud economist at The Duckbill Group; and Liz Fong-Jones, principal developer advocate at Honeycomb.io on Dec. 8 at 10 a.m. PT/1 p.m. ET.

Register here.

Today's tips & tools

It’s true that Slack and other instant-messaging apps might be slowing down your workflow, but did you know there was also a Slack hack for that? Slack’s workflow builder is another one of those less-talked-about features in the app. You can automate some of your more mundane everyday tasks like managing PTO or directing and routing queries from people around the company to subject matter experts. This can be done by using a number of Slack’s pre-made templates. You can download the workflow directly from the site. Each workflow feature has step-by-step instructions for integrating it into your Slack channel.

'Life is too short'

Job-switching is far from new, but the reasons people are deciding to leave their jobs have vastly changed. People are looking for more flexibility in their work, as well as more alignment with their personal passions, according to a new survey by job-search site Indeed. Indeed surveyed over 1,000 people who reported voluntarily resigning from at least two jobs since the beginning of the pandemic. Here are some of the top reasons for why they decided to leave.

  • A change of heart: 92% of the people surveyed said “the pandemic made them feel life is too short to stay in a job they weren’t passionate about."
  • Companies failed to offer the flexibility needed by some employees: 40% of people said their companies refused to accommodate working from home in order to care for children or family members when care services shut down.
  • Pursuing more meaningful work: 85% of job seekers reported they are looking for roles in new industries, and 97% said the pandemic was the catalyst for wanting to switch careers.
  • Remote work has given people more freedom in the types of jobs they consider: 82% of people said the increase in remote job opportunities “made them feel less constrained when it comes to jobs they can pursue."

Around the internet

A roundup of workplace news from the farthest corners of the internet.

Your hybrid work calls with people at home and in the office could soon get a little less awkward.

And the winner of the biggest U.S. corporate office lease of 2021 goes to Meta.

Worth your time: An in-depth look at the questionable treatment and conditions faced by Apple’s frontline workers.

One good tweet: A thread from Marissa Goldberg, founder of Remote Work Prep, about what you need to be successful when working remotely.

Thoughts, questions, tips? Send them to workplace@protocol.com. Hope you had a great week, see you Tuesday.

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