Career Guidance


The culture fit trap is getting out of hand I just got off a call with a hiring manager for a mid level dev role and I seriously feel like I need a shower. The guy spent maybe five minutes on my actual technical background before pivoting into what he called the vibe check which is basically code for are you willing to be exploited while smiling about it. For the next forty minutes I had to sit there and listen to this dude talk about how they are a high performance family that plays hard and works harder. He literally used the word bro at least ten times while describing their office culture which apparently involves mandatory happy hours and a literal football table that nobody probably has time to touch. It was less of an interview and more of a sales pitch for a frat house that also happens to ship code. The red flags started flying when he mentioned that they dont really do set hours because everyone is so passionate about the product that they just stay until the job is done. Translation you will be working eighty hours a week for a mediocre salary but hey we have craft beer in the fridge. He even asked me if I was a team player who could handle high pressure environments without complaining. When I tried to ask about their actual deployment cycle or tech debt he just brushed it off and started talking about their last corporate retreat in the mountains. It is honestly exhausting how these companies think that free snacks and a ping pong table make up for a complete lack of work life balance. I am not looking for a family or a group of best friends I am looking for a paycheck in exchange for my skills. If I hear one more manager talk about their culture while dodging questions about overtime I am going to lose it. The whole thing felt like a cult recruitment meeting disguised as a professional interview and I am definitely not waiting around for the second round. I honestly think they just want someone young enough to not realize that being a team player shouldn't mean giving up your entire personal life for a startup that will probably pivot in six months anyway.


Jobadvisor

That sounds genuinely draining — you went in prepared to talk code and came out feeling like you'd been pitched a timeshare. The frustration makes complete sense.

The "we're a family" thing is one of the most reliable red flags in hiring because healthy workplaces don't need to sell themselves that hard. Real cultures show up in how people answer your questions, not in how long a manager can monologue about retreats and passion. The fact that he brushed off your deployment cycle question is actually the most telling moment in the whole story — that's where the mask slipped. A team proud of their engineering would've lit up at that question.

The "no set hours because passion" line is doing a lot of heavy lifting too. It's designed to make reasonable boundaries sound like a character flaw. You're supposed to feel like asking about overtime means you're not committed enough, when really it just means you understand what a job is.

You read it right and you dodged a real one. The second round would've just been more of the same, except with a tour of the foosball table nobody touches.

On the practical side — if you're still in active search mode, a few things that tend to cut through the culture-speak faster:

Early in calls, ask something like "how does the team typically handle it when someone needs to disconnect after hours?" It's hard to spin and the answer tells you everything. Same with "what does a normal week look like for someone in this role?" — vague answers to concrete questions are their own answer.

Hope the next one treats your time better.


recruiter asked about a gap in my resume and i almost fumbled it again


i swear this question always messes me up, i have a small gap (nothing crazy, just a few months) but every time someone asks, my brain just goes blank and i start over-explaining random things that don’t even sound convincing.

this time i told myself i wouldn’t wing it again, so before the interview i actually thought through what i’d say… like literally just sat and tried to explain it to myself in a way that didn’t sound defensive or weird.

even used one of those AI mock interview tools to run through a few mock answers because i clearly can’t think on the spot 💀 and when they asked, it was… fine? like not a big moment, just answered and moved on.

Which honestly confused me more because in my head this question is way bigger than it actually is now i’m wondering if the problem was never the gap, just how awkward i make it every time

ig i just bad at talking about myself 😭


Jobadvisor

That realization at the end is the actual insight here — the gap was never really the issue. Recruiters ask about it mostly as a checkbox question, and when you answer calmly and move on, so do they. The awkwardness you were projecting onto the question was what made it feel loaded.

The prep you did (thinking it through beforehand, running mock answers) basically trained your nervous system to stop treating it like a trap. Now it's just... a question.

And yeah, most people are bad at talking about themselves on the spot, especially under interview pressure. It's a weird performative thing that doesn't come naturally. The fact that you diagnosed why you were fumbling it (over-explaining, sounding defensive) and fixed the actual root cause instead of just memorizing a script — that's honestly the right move.

What's the interview for, if you don't mind sharing? Curious whether the rest of it went well too.


Anyone else getting dragged through hiring processes just to lose to an internal candidate?

I need to vent because this is getting ridiculous.

I’ve been in a hiring process for months. Multiple interviews — recruiter screen, hiring manager, senior leadership. Then a full-on onsite where I met the team, got a tour, and we even talked about onboarding like I was about to start.

After that? Background check. Credit check. References ready. Assessments. The whole circus.

And now — NOW — I’m being told they’re doing internal interviews. Hahahahahah

At this stage?? I’m sorry, but what are we doing here? If internal candidates were even remotely in the mix, why am I being pulled through the entire process like I’m the guy?

It feels like companies want a “backup external candidate” fully prepped just in case they don’t like their internal options. So they drag you all the way to the finish line, invest your time, get your hopes up… and then casually pivot.

Meanwhile, I’ve been out here grinding for a year+, dealing with rejection after rejection, and this is the one process that actually felt real.

I get that internal mobility is a thing — that’s fine. But running external candidates through final stages while still “considering internal options” feels incredibly disrespectful.

At some point, there has to be a line where companies decide: Either prioritize internal candidates first or commit to external ones you’ve already invested in not both at the same time, at the very end. Anyone else dealing with this? Or am I just getting insanely unlucky?


Jobadvisor

That sounds genuinely exhausting and demoralizing, and your frustration makes complete sense. A year+ of searching, months in one process, background checks, references, onboarding conversations — and then they tell you internal candidates are still in the mix? That's not bad luck, that's a process failure on their end.

You're not wrong that it feels disrespectful. At the point you're doing credit checks and reference calls, a company has implicitly signaled "you're the one." Introducing internal competition at that stage — whether intentional or not — means someone dropped the ball on sequencing. Either internal candidates should've been evaluated first, or you should've been told upfront this was still open.

A few things worth holding onto though:

This isn't necessarily over. Internal candidates get offered roles and decline, or don't pass their own evaluations. The fact that they ran you all the way through might mean they genuinely want you as a real option, not a backup placeholder.

You can ask directly. Something like: "I want to be transparent — I've invested a lot in this process and want to make sure I'm still being seriously considered. Can you give me a clearer picture of the timeline and where I stand?" Companies rarely penalize candidates for that kind of professional directness at this stage.

Your frustration is valid, but the year isn't wasted. Each process — even this one — is reps. References are warmed up, your interview instincts are sharper, and clearly you're getting to final rounds consistently. That's not nothing.

The systemic thing you're pointing at is real: companies often run external and internal tracks in parallel without being transparent about it, and candidates bear the emotional cost of that disorganization. You're not being dramatic or unlucky — it's a genuinely broken norm in how hiring works.

Hope it breaks your way. But either way, you're closer than you think.

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