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The Hiring Practices Of Twitter

Twitter is used by hundreds of millions of people and worth billions of dollars. In fact, Twitter’s recent IPO priced its shares at 26 dollars each, giving the company a market capitalization of $18.34 billion. To put this into perspective, Macy’s has a market capitalization of $17 billion while Bed, Bath, and Beyond has one around $16 billion. With Twitter being so popular and so valuable, many people find themselves asking, “How can I work there?” You might be surprised to find that Twitter’s hiring practices are nearly as unique as their product itself.

Working at Twitter

Founded in San Francisco in 2006, Twitter now has offices all across the globe. Twitter employs people in several cities, including Amsterdam, Berlin, Atlanta, New York, Boston, New Delhi, Dublin, Los Angeles, Singapore, Paris, Madrid, Chicago, Mumbai, Toronto, Seattle, Seoul, Vancouver, and Toronto.

The jobs at Twitter are equally varied. There are positions in project management, software engineering, data analyzing, ads management, office management, android engineering, artist relationship management, brand planning, sales analytics, research management, presentation design, B2B marketing, creative specialties, market research, and media partnerships (as well as several others).

How Twitter Hires

When you think of working at a place like Twitter, you may think of working in a place where happy hours are mandatory and a game of Ping-Pong on the clock is never frowned upon. While it may be impossible to say what it is like to work at Twitter without actually working there, the hiring practices in which they engage seem to fit with the happy hour/ping-pong image.

To begin with, Twitter doesn’t always look at the collegiate degrees or scholastic accomplishments of their employees; rather, they look at certain personality traits and specific skillsets that fit the position. Often, they look to hire people who are hard workers, intelligent thinkers, team players, and have a strong sense of humor.

Twitter also believes in keeping their recruiting in-house (as opposed to outsourcing it like many start-ups tend to do). They have focused on building an infrastructure of recruiting and placing a high priority on that infrastructure. In essence, everyone who works at Twitter is a recruiter. Engineers may come across other engineers on open-source projects; writers may see the works of other writers; executives may even notice that someone who uses Twitter to discuss everyday happenings has a particular knack that the company is seeking. When this happens, the recruiting team is informed and it falls on them to make the connections and (possibly) offer the jobs.

Twitter also considers outside hobbies and out-of-the-office interests an applicant has, ultimately looking to see if the potential hire has passion that transcends the things they get paid to do.

The Twitter Interviewing Process

Like the hiring process, the interviewing process Twitter offers its applicants is also unique. Rather than having candidates walk into a stiff, intimidating environment where they cross their fingers and hope they answer the interviewer’s questions with the right answers, Twitter strives to make the process as pleasant as possible. The recruiting team, the interviewer, and the rest of the office employees all work together to help the candidate feel positive about their experience, even when they fail to get the job.

Twitter’s Reaction to Criticism

While Twitter seems like a very fun place to work, it has not been without its criticisms. The company has faced disapproval for having a board of directors that was made up only of white men. They responded to this criticism by diversifying their high level roles and hiring former NBC News chief digital officer Vivian Schiller.

Byline

Ronald Wells writes on social media, gadgets, software, web development, video games, cell phones, cell phone insurance and other associated topics. S4 owners looking to learn more about the latter should check out the S4 insurance brand Protectyourbubble.com.

Image credit goes to Etsy Labs.

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