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Which type of pre-onsite technical interview is the best for recruiting engineers?

Karina Chow
UX Collective
Published in
8 min readApr 20, 2021

3 illustrations of a candidate interviewing via phone screen, online challenge, and take-home assessment.
Illustration made using Stubborn

Pre-onsite Experience Preferences

Quantitative poll data

Poll results from around 300 people. 64% preferred take home assessments while the remaining 36% preferred either technical phone screens or online coding challenges (split equally).
Frontend Reddit poll + Backend Reddit Poll
LinkedIn poll of 44 SWEs also indicated that take home project reigned supreme by a large margin.
LinkedIn poll

Qualitative comments and chats

Quotes from people who largely preferred either coding challenges or tech phone screens. “Well I’m fine with a practical take home if I’m paid for my time” and “Not fond of doing any work I’m not paid for.”
Quotes from people who largely preferred either coding challenges or tech phone screens
Quote: I prefer technical phone screens because I think the interviewer gets a better idea of my abilities when I’m able to explain my thought process. And if I get stuck, they can help point me in the right direction.
Quotes from people who largely preferred take home assessments. “I like that I’d be able to demonstrate my skills more accurately to what I might do on-the-job compared to the other options” and “I like to take a few stabs at a problem on my own time without being actively judged, then I feel more confident in presenting what I came up with”
Quotes from people who largely preferred take home assessments

Emerging patterns/personas based on interview preference

Conclusions

Candidate quote: “I really appreciated it when an employer offered the option of either a take-home project or a technical screen. I find that I perform better on take-homes, but it’s exhausting and time consuming, so having the choice enables me to decide based on my circumstances.”

As an interviewer, I want to know that every interviewee is advertising their best self.

The UX Collective donates US$1 for each article published on our platform. This story contributed to Bay Area Black Designers: a professional development community for Black people who are digital designers and researchers in the San Francisco Bay Area. By joining together in community, members share inspiration, connection, peer mentorship, professional development, resources, feedback, support, and resilience. Silence against systemic racism is not an option. Build the design community you believe in.

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🇨🇳 🇩🇪 Creative technologist based in Brooklyn and SF. Writes about technology × design × art × psychology. Previous eng @Patreon, @Honor, @Microsoft

Responses (2)

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I love the way you describe interviews as a UX. I've been in the process at 20+ companies at a time and prioritized based on what the interviews (however unintentionally) said about the culture. I figured the places that treated me like a human…

Great insights and love the point about how recruiters should be meeting and trying to impress the candidates.
I did engineering (but not CS) in undergrad--CMU represent--and have had enough external validation to I never feel like I'm a stupid…