> My experience is that most startups just put you in front of people and tell you to figure it out.
Some do, sure. And that's the difference between a startup and a regular company right there: that "figure it out" bit.
You'll mess up and fumble and come up with crazy ideas, 95% of which are worse than what the established companies are doing.
But you'll learn a ton along the way.
It's messy and inefficient but that's how startups are.
I personally learned a ton from hacking interviews at startups and all that "figuring it out".
Also, guess what? All these sacred "FAANG interviews" that seem to have come down from the sky, etched on tablets? They were developed by Microsoft back when it was a startup, then evolved by various SV companies at their startup stage, too.
The next great idea in interviewing also won't come from the thousands of engineers obediently marching to the tune of the same principles everyone is using, but from some startup trying something crazy and ambitious and miraculously getting it to work.
Some do, sure. And that's the difference between a startup and a regular company right there: that "figure it out" bit.
You'll mess up and fumble and come up with crazy ideas, 95% of which are worse than what the established companies are doing.
But you'll learn a ton along the way.
It's messy and inefficient but that's how startups are.
I personally learned a ton from hacking interviews at startups and all that "figuring it out".
Also, guess what? All these sacred "FAANG interviews" that seem to have come down from the sky, etched on tablets? They were developed by Microsoft back when it was a startup, then evolved by various SV companies at their startup stage, too.
The next great idea in interviewing also won't come from the thousands of engineers obediently marching to the tune of the same principles everyone is using, but from some startup trying something crazy and ambitious and miraculously getting it to work.