Ask HN: Got invited to work at Google(for 2nd time), what to expect?
Hi,
This is the second time a recruiter invites me to apply for a job at Google. The first time I rejected the offer because it was not part of my area of interest, but now this new recruiter told me I could apply either Developer Relations, Technical Solutions or also Software Engineering roles. EDIT: 2nd recruiter told me he was doing following up from the first one.
The questions I have for you Googlers/ex-Googlers are:
Why this new recruiter never knew about me, but to apply for a job anyway? How is life doing software engineering at Google? Did working at Google helped you to become a better entrepreneur?
Thanks.
10 comments
[ 3.8 ms ] story [ 32.2 ms ] threadThis sort of thing is usually a sign that your recruiter is not a good recruiter. Break contact and move on to someone who actually tries to match you to real opportunities. Recruiters are supposed to provide value to the applicant as much as the employer.
I've been reached out to about five times by Google in the space of two years. Every single time I say the same thing
"I'm based in Edinburgh, I do not wish to move, therefore I cannot work for you - regardless of how awesome you might be. Please don't contact me again."
It's a shame that their recruiters don't seem to use any consistent search-backend prior to mailing people ..
Recruiters are generally desperate to fill roles, and doubly so for engineers in the current market. Some of them will carefully discern how to find the best candidates and contact them with discretion. Many of them will not.
If you want to work at Google, or anywhere else, then by all means pursue this. But treat being contacted by recruiters as an unrelated and independent event.
A) You got a second recruiter contacting because sometimes the recruiters aren't checking any internal database before reaching out to you, bring the:
B) Be wary of the wide net (Developer Relations, Technical Solutions, and Software Engineering) suggest that this recruiter hasn't looked into you very deeply to suggest what they think is the role you have enjoyed.
C) Google may not make you a better entrepreneur. But it could. My experiences with Google software engineers is that they sometimes feel like impersonators when attending startup events.
Maybe you're a fantastic Dev but getting a call from them doesn't really mean much.
I think this recruiter just was doing follow up after few months and trying to re-connect. Last year happened to me the same with a Pebble recruiter who later went to Greylock.
I can't answer the questions because I have never been a Googler. But I can share why I rejected their invitations for interviews. Google pays good, and is generous on stock options. As my Google friends say, it's like already half retired. I just did not want to do that in my late 20s. Later after graduation I went back to China and started looking for things to build. I really do not think Google would help much in entrepreneurship, except you may get a lot of talented friends. But again, they do not want to leave Google to work with you on your project because Google pays too well.
This is very interesting. Few employees I know at Google are very busy and working in several things at the same time.
>> I just did not want to do that in my late 20s.
I'm 26 and I think the same too. I have the need to build something where every line of code matters, making people's life easier instead of working in a big company.