[nycphp-talk] Re: OT: webmaster test
Kristina Anderson
ka at kacomputerconsulting.com
Tue Apr 15 09:47:14 EDT 2008
This goes back to my point about the status of the profession -- if
we're being compared to cooks and service technicians, you know times
are going to be rough for us. I'd rather be compared to a lawyer...and
make closer to what they make...what we do is no less complex.
> This is a very interesting discussion. I believe in being able to
> obtain the best person for the job, but I'm not sure that creating
a
> standardize programming test is the best way. Or to devise some
trick
> questions. It reminds me of academic hazing constructed to make the
> instructor look smart.
>
> If you were going to hire a personal cook, you would go by
> recommendations and actually sample what they can prepare based on
> the kind of meals you desire. A cook passing a test about the use of
> appliances and what's the best way to melt butter doesn't mean they
> are going to be able to make the Weight Watchers® meat-loaf the way
> you like it. You would have the candidate cook prepare some meals
for
> you and ask for their feed back on real questions like, "We eat many
> chicken dishes, what do you recommend?". This would also give you a
> chance to see if this person is not only able to prepare a meal to
> your liking but if they are a good resource for you as well. Before
I
> push this any further, I don't have a cook, don't know how to cook,
> but I know what I would want if I was going to hire one cause it
> would be based on what they actually have to do on the job. A
> certified cook doesn't mean much if they can't make White Chocolate
> Mousse on-demand. :-)
>
> Bringing this back to programming, webmastering, or service
> tech'ing. :-) You want to hire a webmaster. Make a list of the kinds
> of things you wish to have a webmaster do on the job most of their
> time. If the job is to be able to re-partition disks or change
> content on a corporate web site using a popular open source CMS
> (Joomla), then I feel those are the things that should be asked of a
> candidate to demonstrate in front of a work station. If most of
their
> job will be installing new software and configuring a system then set-
> up some systems with packages for them to do this. This is assuming
> if you can't entirely trust the recommendations for this person or
if
> you simply want to see if they can do what you need them to do
> specifically. If the candidate doesn't know how to do something and
> looks on the web to figure it out, and is still able to get the job
> done in a reasonable amount of time than I consider this a plus,
> because someone who is resourceful and works this way on the job is
> better than someone who only knows what they have been shown to do.
> Syntax examples of most things are only a few clicks away.
>
> At the very least, a candidate should walk away from the interview
> feeling that they were actually being evaluated for what they would
> have to do on the job. If they had difficulty it would be obvious
to
> them on what areas they need to improve on and realize why they
> weren't offered a job. As for the hiring manager, you want to feel
> confident that the person you hire can do the real job and if they
> have successfully demonstrated performing small work tasks you will
> know for sure.
>
> David Roth
> davidalanroth at gmail.com
>
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