Shared Links (weekly) August 10, 2025
For more like this, subscribe to the newsletter and get these links and more in your email.
For more like this, subscribe to the newsletter and get these links and more in your email.
Yes, it’s a dumb question that creates bias and other problems in the hiring process. On the other hand, when you need a job, you need a job. If mentioning something in response to the “outside of work” question creates an interest or connection with the interviewer, it’s to your advantage to do it.
College football is maybe the most white, upper-middle-class version of that. There are others. (Travel, outdoor activities, etc.) We should live in a world where all employers are working to remove this kind of bias from hiring, but we do not live in that world. The one we live in grants an advantage to the job seeker who can find a common interest with the interviewer. You might as well do some research on the people you’re going to be meeting with and turn this bias to your advantage if you can.
For more like this, subscribe to the newsletter and get these links and more in your email.
For more like this, subscribe to the newsletter and get these links and more in your email.
I am likely very much in the minority in working this way. That’s OK. My point is that remote work should be flexible. Find what works for you that allows you to meet the job requirements and provides balance to your days. That’s the whole point.
For more like this, subscribe to the newsletter and get these links and more in your email.