Earlier this year we decided to hire SWE summer interns. We wanted to know how well someone would perform on the job, so we gave our top candidates a real paid task from our backlog. Introducing a payment allowed us to ask for something challenging and lengthy, while also respecting the candidates’ time. We also found that the strongest candidates self-selected into this paid screening challenge, unlike the traditional and mundane take-home coding assignments. You can find our challenge and the rewarded pull requests here: https://algora.io/algora/challenge/bounties/1
From our experience, hiring by building product predicts on-the-job performance really well.
Similarly, one of our founding customers Lithobyte used Algora to complete $15k of contract work with a developer over four months before hiring him full-time, calling it “trial employment”. Is this something any of you have tried?
Furthermore, as a bootstrapped startup we didn’t feel ready to pay fixed salaries to our interns. Instead, we wanted a more outcome-based way to collaborate, making sure any money we spent was consequential. That’s why we used bounties for all of our work during the internship — you can see a sample here: https://algora.io/demo/bounties
If you’d like to try Algora, today we are launching our first public release! In addition, we are really curious about your thoughts and relevant experience; how do you all go about hiring developers? We’d love to hear from you, also feel free to reach out to us at zafer@algora.io and ioannis@algora.io
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[ 2.6 ms ] story [ 9.8 ms ] threadEarlier this year we decided to hire SWE summer interns. We wanted to know how well someone would perform on the job, so we gave our top candidates a real paid task from our backlog. Introducing a payment allowed us to ask for something challenging and lengthy, while also respecting the candidates’ time. We also found that the strongest candidates self-selected into this paid screening challenge, unlike the traditional and mundane take-home coding assignments. You can find our challenge and the rewarded pull requests here: https://algora.io/algora/challenge/bounties/1
From our experience, hiring by building product predicts on-the-job performance really well.
Similarly, one of our founding customers Lithobyte used Algora to complete $15k of contract work with a developer over four months before hiring him full-time, calling it “trial employment”. Is this something any of you have tried?
Furthermore, as a bootstrapped startup we didn’t feel ready to pay fixed salaries to our interns. Instead, we wanted a more outcome-based way to collaborate, making sure any money we spent was consequential. That’s why we used bounties for all of our work during the internship — you can see a sample here: https://algora.io/demo/bounties
If you’d like to try Algora, today we are launching our first public release! In addition, we are really curious about your thoughts and relevant experience; how do you all go about hiring developers? We’d love to hear from you, also feel free to reach out to us at zafer@algora.io and ioannis@algora.io