Friday, July 31, 2015

I'm not feeling lucky

A couple of months after I moved to the Valley They Call Silicon, I realized that applying to Google was a complete non-starter. Even before you got to the interview stage, where they’re famous for demanding that you explain why manhole covers are round or calculate how many ping-pong balls it would take to fill up a school bus.

This is because the Don’t Be Evil crowd designed the process to conform to the principles of NHI. No Human Involvement. Use their applicant tracking system (ATS—which, to be fair, does have a better interface than Taleo), do not attempt to find someone there to intervene.

I understand why they do that—they’re Google; anyone with dreams of tech-hood aspires to be a Googler. They get bazillions of applications every day, and they can choose to speak with only those few whom their algorithm identifies as thinking exactly the way they do. They don’t want no stinkin’ diverse cuckoos in their nest, and they can ensure that they don’t get any.

So I don’t know what possessed me to bother, because cuckoo-ness aside, I’m really an enterprise, not a consumer, girl. But I applied for a position within Google Maps. I actually use and like that particular app, so why not? It was the usual ATS experience and I have no expectation that my details will make it past the machine. But I did get rather a kick out of their this-transaction-is-concluded pop-up:


Oh, the humanity! The faux humanity!




No comments:

Post a Comment