That would appear to show that nobody is actually getting hired from these threads, unless some other means of communication is being used.
Has anyone actually been hired by a company as a result of these threads?
If so, did you do something to stand out, or how did the process work for you?
[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30515748
1. YC_company1 - about month back and for to confirm that position is indeed open. Tech interviews were not about that we agreed and not in the language I preferred, but in the language interviewer knew. No offer.
2. YC_company2 - quick interview turnover, very generic questions, interviewer looked distracted/tired. No offer.
3. Company3 - nice tech interviews with test. Completed all of them, 100% test pass. Interview with HR about 'what are the important qualities of the engineer'. No offer.
4. Company4 - very hard tech interviews. After about only one hour after the last round email - no hire.
5. CompaniesN - no replies after couple of email exchanges, miss-scheduled calls and ghosting.
Also need to mention, salary ranges were not spectacular at all, slightly above of that the marked pays locally where I live.
I will browse the thread as a hiring manager but it is fairly rare that what I am looking for has relevant candidates. It is easier to advertise in Who's Hiring and get many qualified applicants with a much higher conversion rate than any channel except recommendations by existing employees.
Similarly, I found more relevant people faster in Who Wants to be Hired than on the regular sites for promoting one's design portfolio which felt a bit like browsing LinkedIn.
I received 7 inbound emails, some more personalized than others. 1 Twitter DM.
Surprisingly, I even received emails into the last week of February.
For context, I'd call myself an intermediate full stack JavaScript developer. I don't think I did anything special; here was my comment: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30173273
Fun story was I actually applied for one of those companies through a job site and they ghosted it. But a manager from the company contacted me through HN and pushed that application through. So the hit rate is also very high.
You might have to adjust your post format a little to be appealing though. The first time I tried, nobody contacted me, but the replies came rolling in on the second month.
The CEO of my current company (craftworks) first reached out to me per email. I already had them in my crosshairs from earlier but took this as a sign to apply.
It took some time before I actually started working because of immigration and covid, but they were really supportive and helped me through the process
Would highly recommend, always looking for more colleagues ;) Especially if you're in Europe / Vienna
I also say e-mail me for my resume, which might mean less responses than if I could post my resume and go into my work more. If I wasn't employed currently I would link to my resume, but I am employed.
I did get hired for a short consulting gig off a who wants to be hired thread a few years ago (They wanted an FTE relocation, but I was not sure it would work out, so I suggested I consult for a short period before a FTE relocation and - it did not work out. Probably more my fault than theirs.)
I look at some of these threads and see people says "Technologies: Java, Python, JavaScript, Ruby, C++, C". I don't know if this works or not, my posting is pretty focused. Most people I interview who just list Java programmer have difficulty answering slightly advanced questions about Java, I don't know what someone listing all those languages would know.
As a European however I found the salaries to be on the lower on for the few EU companies I talked to and so never did go further in the process.
I look very carefully at the person's comment and resume before emailing. Are they happy working in our time zone? Do they have experience in our tech stack? Do they have any preferences we can accommodate? If the role does not meet their hard requirements I do not email at all, and if we don't meet any of their soft requirements I call those out in my email.
Despite this only 20% of the people I've emailed have even responded. One person responded that they thought it was a good fit, and one person did not mention the role at all but asked me for my opinion on their resume. Most people did not respond at all. I don't understand that.
If I posted in that thread looking for a job and got spam I would ignore it but if someone personally wrote an email that met all my requirements I would feel obliged for some sort of response.
This is just a guess. I don't bother posting there because I'm not that interested in working for most startups due to family responsibilities and the fact that my area doesn't have a lot of good IT options (remotes not a great fit for me when coming up to speed, and relocating is not an option).
(of course, don't just spam people commenting, only contact the person if you feel there is an opportunity for a genuine work relationship)
People are usually contacted on their email, not openly in the thread. Do you also look at the “who is hiring” thread and think that nobody is applying to those jobs because they don’t have any responses in the thread?
* The first one doesn't hire me after several interviews because they are looking someone more skilled in the cloud security.
* The second one offered me a consulting job, but I cannot accept due to my actual work contract
* The third one offered me a job, but I am going to refuse for several reasons (taxes, geopolitical situation, etc.).
* Another one contacted me, asking to submit the resume on their website, but they never call me back.
To be fair, though, I was only contacted by that one company (and like 2-3 spam emails) so I wouldn't really count on HN as my main strategy.
On the other hand, I'm Mexican and HN is very Silicon Valley centric, so maybe people from the Bay Area get more replies?
I mostly just posted in the same format as everyone else. And posted my rate.
Most folks will email/DM you for a chat about what you're looking for.