I just spent 30 mins explaining something they didn’t teach you in school and all the ways to avoid fucking up.

Ya don’t got it boss.

  • saltesc@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    I hire for data analytics, management, etc. Your typical entry level roles require fairly good understanding of Excel, basic querying (beginner SQL or M/PQ usually), and the basic concepts that come with that like tables, ETL, wrangling, etc. Anyone interested can self-teach in their spare time up to a really solid level in a few months, so qualifications and short experience is not at all an issue. It’s really beginner stuff and easy to get into.

    Unfortunately I get a lot of the Excel warriors of their current job applying. They have limited and basic Excel skills, almost no knowledge of basic data concepts and have listed SQL, Python, and R on their CV because they’re aware they exist but have done a 30 min intro course online at some point.

    So, one of the questions I ask is, “If you were an Excel function, which one would you be and why?”

    Most people say VLOOKUP which immediately tells me all I need to know. I’ve even had “Pivot Tables” a few times which isn’t even a function or something you’d be caught dead using outside of quick one-off tasks.

    So that’s how I watch my candidate pool of 40 quickly dwindle down to the 3 or 4 actual data people that applied. But if not for that, it’s months and months and months of double-checking everything, mistakes everywhere, days spent on a 30 min job, everyone’s capacity and patience spent helping the new guy learn the basics. You give them some intro courses, they don’t do 'em. You spend your Friday afternoon starting from scratch and completing all the tasks they broke or didn’t complete in the past two weeks. Monday comes around,

    “So hey, just gonna show you what I did here and how I quickly got it done… You understand that?”

    “Yep, definitely!”

    “You suuuure?”

    “Yup!”

    Rinse repeat over and over…

      • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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        3 months ago

        I’m embedded python because al reason has left this earth

      • saltesc@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Well the ‘why’ part is to get insight into someone’s personality too. That’s the other point of the question.

        So, for me, CONCAT because I’m simplistic and like bringing everything together neatly and efficiently. No band-aid solutions with a bunch of ampersands. But also a bit of a VSTACK kinda guy because I’m lazy and always looking for the smartest way to get things done with minimal effort. I guess that’s basically the vertical version of CONCAT for arrays, really…

    • cynar@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Some of the best people to teach are the ones who come back to ask, incredibly apologetic, because they only properly absorbed 60% of what you told them. They need some clarification on the last 40%

      Meanwhile, most absorb 20% at best, and try and blag it from there.

      • saltesc@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Definitely. No question is a stupid question. No pace is too slow if you’re learning. Every brain learns with a snowball effect that it doesn’t notice, until one day someone says, “Damn. You’re like a whiz at this stuff, huh?”

        The “most” people you mention are simply doing something they’re disinterested in. Sadly, this seems to be most people. But I could have a career in many things; mechanic, business planner, conservationist, counselor, physician, goes on and on, they’re all appealing. I like problem-solving. I used to do graphic design and people said I was great at it, but I realised I just like learning the software and nailing the criteria. I actually really didn’t like creating new stuff. Tried learning and my brain would just switch off. Beyond the basics of art theory, my brain just didn’t give a fuck. So I realised I liked the problem-solving part and started learning analytics and that’s certainly scratched the itch. Years on, can’t stop learning, must level up. Must solve harder problems. Must get Eureka dopamine hit after a soul-crushing week of data riddles.

        Got a new hire that started five months ago that was definitely not the strongest candidate and very new to the field. They’re a sponge and knew they would be. But a few times I’ve busted them still on Teams way after work hours. I don’t like that at all and there’s definitely no reason for them to be, but clearly playing with data and learning it has become a hobby. We’ll see after their honeymoon phase with it is over…if it even ends.

    • BallsandBayonets@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Maybe if those jobs paid more than $17/hr you wouldn’t have to clean up after your hires!

      Apologies for the rant, not targeted at you as I’m sure you don’t have the power to offer better wages, but damn the job market sucks right now. I could make more waiting tables, except the service industry market sucks just as much, with thousands of people applying for dozens of jobs.

      • saltesc@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Where I live, entry level is around $75K ($50K USD) which I thought is pretty normal. Someone with a few years experience and knows their way around lands around $90-110K. Depending on responsibility, experienced roles can be up to $150K. Sort of tops out there unless getting more into running data and analytics rather than hands-on.

        $17/hr USD is just a bit more than what I was on at 19 serving at Sizzler, many, many years ago.

    • hstde@feddit.de
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      3 months ago

      Or, they did listen and they don’t have any questions because they are still processing that information dump and don’t know what to ask yet. You can’t dump 10-20 years of experience on one person in 30 minutes and expect them to understand it all. Some might, but those are the outliers. I’ll mostly tell them to try it out and see what they can remember of the things I told them and we’ll do the specific things they can’t together. That way they get a fuller picture of the topic and you don’t waste time by babysitting them with things they already know or remember. But that requires that people trust you’ll help them when they have problems.

      • jg1i@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        ^^^ This is the real answer. I often don’t know what questions to ask until I actually get my hands dirty. I don’t know what I don’t know.

        In math class, I often remember listening to the teacher and thinking I understood everything, but once I started the homework I realized that I didn’t.