@franz_okyere1 Yes, instead of wasting time with riddles, it might be better to give candidates a chance as an evaluation week by looking at their harmony within the team.
The number 1 answer across all industries is "Passing tests".
You get a test to solve, or an interview which is an in-person test, every time.
But the only thing a test can directly tell is if you are good at passing tests. There's at best weak correlation with actually doing the job. Likewise a CV mainly tells how good you are at writing CVs (or how good your friend who helped you is).
Tests take the rich, messy, chaotic reality of solving problems in the real world and reduce them to "What is your greatest weakness" or "Have you memorised this algorithm" or "How would you hypothetically solve this hypothetical problem". Ugh.
@dkaravias You're so right. In addition, I had many friends who were eliminated from applications because of controversial personality tests. How can online tests can measure my personality and say that whether I can be a leader or not. Many people select different answers than what they think just because they think it is the correct one. Especially in technical jobs such as engineering, questions about the techniques used at work can be asked instead of personality tests and brain teasers. It's sad to be eliminated in the early stages because you can't solve the pattern questions or solve them slower than others.
Lately, I've noticed that more and more industries and fields are interested in their people having emotional intelligence. Not just knowing stuff, but know how to empathetic and truly learn to listen and not just respond to situations.
@paulo_marcial It's good to hear that, because I want to believe that things are different now. It's good to know that business life is not just about working,but mutual communication and harmony are important.
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