@AC #
Posted Tuesday 30th December 2008 09:10 GMT
"if the interviewer was that petty, probably best out of it!"
So true ... Sometimes, I'll push buttons when I'm trying for a contract with a company I've never worked for before. If I can upset an interviewer or interviewers by pointing out an obvious flaw in the company's methodology (usually pretty easy with Fortune 500 companies), I know they aren't interested in solving problems; rather they are more interested in maintaining the corporate hierarchy and status quo. I turn down contracts after interviews like that. Even in today's economy. It's just not worth it. Most of 'em either get bought or sold in a year or two. Or just go under.
See DEC for a particularly egregious example, followed by Amdahl. Or how about Quantum, purchased by Maxtor, who in turn was bought by Seagate ... maybe Yahoo will go that route. Microsoft is in danger, as well, as is Apple, as is Sun.
Corporate culture is all very well and good, but when it gets in the way of business solutions, it needs to take a back seat. I think 90% of the problem is the "us vs. them" attitude that is so common in business today. Management tries to build a "we're better than the competition" attitude thru' out the company, without providing the infrastructure. This is bass-ackwards, in my book. If you can't deliver the goods, no amount of corporate culture will matter.
