Marketing & Sales·May 26, 2026

The worst job interview I ever had

Article URL: Comments URL: Points: 75 # Comments: 43

Hacker News3 min readSingle source
The worst job interview I ever had
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Article URL: Comments URL: Points: 75 # Comments: 43

  • May 26, 2026The worst job interview I ever had wasn’t a knowledge meltdown, coding assessment failure, or a complete language misunderstanding with the interviewer (although I’ve had all of those, too).
  • No, the worst job interview I had was something I can only describe as an unsolicited psych evaluation.
  • At a less-than-10-person company, especially in the earliest days, cultural fit is of singular importance.
  • The first interview was a quick conversation with a founder and their head of engineering — a fairly uneventful informational interview (“this is why we’re great join us blah blah”).
  • This person gave the impression that it was a safe space to share, divulging little of their own trauma.

May 26, 2026The worst job interview I ever had wasn’t a knowledge meltdown, coding assessment failure, or a complete language misunderstanding with the interviewer (although I’ve had all of those, too). No, the worst job interview I had was something I can only describe as an unsolicited psych evaluation. I’m an engineer, primarily working for small startups. At a less-than-10-person company, especially in the earliest days, cultural fit is of singular importance. Even if you hire a cracked engineer, it’s probably not gonna be a good experience all-around if you can’t make a human connection. All this is to say - I get why you’d want to prioritize this. But despite many quite normal culture fit interviews, there’s one I still replay in my confused head once in a while. And I think it’s worth sharing not because I want to shame the company or individuals (I’ve left them anonymous), but rather to suggest some reconsideration for founders and hiring managers in the same boat. About 3 years ago, I responded to a message looking for a founding engineer at a mental health startup (their noble cause was improving therapy access for at-risk youth). The first interview was a quick conversation with a founder and their head of engineering — a fairly uneventful informational interview (“this is why we’re great join us blah blah”). The follow-up with the head of engineering was scheduled shortly afterwards. The follow-up, they described over email, would be a bit non traditional - a ~90 minute culture fit chat. Note there was no technical assessment yet. Expecting little, I joined the video call. It was explained we’d just be getting to know each other based on some guiding questions. I fail to recall the exact wording of the discussion topics, but they were, in fact, non-technical — covering such lovely topics as the hardest day of my life, my biggest life challenges, and other similar “trauma-baiting” questions. Now, to be clear, I can understand why these discussions might give deep insight into a candidate! It’s just that I think it’s frankly a little invasive when you’re basically meeting this person for the first time. I’m a little ashamed remembering myself talking about failed relationships, family struggles, and interpersonal challenges in previous work environments. This person gave the impression that it was a safe space to share, divulging little of their own trauma. By the end of the call I felt completely emotionally drained - and i hadn’t even opened my terminal! By the time I got the cursory one line “We won’t be moving forward” email 24 hours later that emotional exhaustion quickly turned into two new feelings: shame and anger. I felt awful that i had shared such deeply personal things with the interviewer just to be cast off in a rejection email. I felt angry that I was rejected. I felt embarrassment that my soul was seemingly cracked open and judged “unworthy.” It wasn’t my skills they were rejecting. It was… me.. I felt confused that a mental health startup had consciously decided to choose an interview so capable of making candidates feel so vulnerable. I don’t think this person was trying to be cruel. Honestly, that almost made it more confusing. The format itself created the problem. Culture fit is important, make no mistake. Make sure the people you hire are good people with strong morals. But consider evaluating this in a way that doesn’t make candidates feel like they need to share their deepest experiences just to scrape and claw for employment.

Integrity note  ·  Xela does not rewrite or paraphrase article content. The excerpt above is the source publication's own words, sanitized for display. For the full piece — including any quotes, charts, or images — read it at Hacker News. Xela's rewritten version is off for this story, so there's no editorial angle attached — you're getting the source's reporting unfiltered. When the rewrite is on, we add a What this means block underneath with the operator/trader takeaway.

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