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Software Programming Interviews Part 2 - Whatever is 'Culture Fit'!

Part 1 of this series is a perfect segue for this hot button topic - Culture Fit. What is it? Is it a hoax and/or an HR tool to explain away anomalies in hiring patterns? Must you care? How does one prepare for this?

Newsflash - Culture Fit is real whether you like it or not. Yes, it is a much-abused term, and often an easy crutch to explain away hiring biases. However, a 'team' is not an objective, automated entity. A team is only people who work together. When a new hire joins an already successful team, it is that same infamous 'Culture Fit' done right that keeps the team on the success trajectory. Or in a better outcome, even accelerates it.

The way I see it is like so: every team is a 'virtual person'. Every team has one single collective pulse, IQ, ethics, voice and image. By 'collective' I don't mean 'homogenous', rather a common fabric that holds together diversity successfully. It is the Fit with this collective presence that represents to me Culture Fit. The biases play out when consciously or (more likely) sub-consciously a team favors more of the same, or is swayed by stereotypes. If you do sense it and would like to make a change, you are probably most effective in influencing it after you join that team.

Corporate culture has an unstated baseline with collaboration, verbal/written communication, and body language. These lend very easily to conscious preparation which is not merely applicable to interviews but also to day to day work life.

There may be other aspects that you can train yourself for as part of continuous development. How well do you listen? How effective is your questioning and critical thinking? When presented with an alternate proposal or idea, how open are you to evaluating it against your own?

Then there are aspects may be closer to your core personality and harder (but not impossible) to change: What do you do when you hit a wall or draw a blank with a problem? If you want to change this behavior, you have options and now you have to make a choice. That choice may or may not align with the team you are interviewing for.

Do you ask for help and if so, at what point in the problem solving? This again is tied to core personality which reveals tenacity, self-driven-ness and initiative.

I don't intend to present here an exhaustive checklist of behavior patterns and scenarios. And in fact, many of these don't have a right or wrong answer.

Know that Culture Fit is not often consciously tested for in technical interviews. However, a mis-alignment (whether governed by sub-conscious bias or not) quickly gets noticed as a red flag.

Do your research on the company culture and if possible, the team's. Analyze the interviewers carefully to better understand the team culture. Ask questions if needed. If you do want to adapt yourself to the team, understand that you are doing so not just for the interview but for that job role. Finally, be authentic and do not lie!