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How we got 900 applications on our Developer Position

Bearer is a remote-first company; we have always found this to be a strength, for many reasons.

Hiring is one of them.

Thus far, we hired, mainly opportunistically, by networking. This method worked well up to the point when we needed to expand our circle and hire from the outside.

From 1 to 10

Guillaume and I have been in the industry for a while now; we've met many developers. That's providing us an unfair advantage. When we open a position, we naturally discuss it with those within our network. That's how we got to be a team of 10!

The jobs page we created in the beginning has also helped us source outside talent. Additionally, we also tweet about opportunities on the Bearer Twitter account. From time to time, we even receive emails from people, prospecting.

A tweet to about a job offer.

Up to this point, we've only been onboarding Senior Engineers because we felt like we didn't have the structure to support a Junior Engineer. In the past few months, we've made a lot of progress and it was time to take a step back and re-evaluate this position. We've just rebuilt our dashboard from the ground up (built with TypeScript, ReactJS, GraphQL) and the foundations are rock solid (we will blog about this 😉). The website has also proven to be future-proof and easy to maintain. We were ready to onboard a new Engineer and this time it would be a Junior!

We published a job offer for a Junior/Mid-Level, Frontend Engineer and were inundated by applications.

10 and beyond

An image of Buzz Lightyear

We got in touch with the amazing people at remotive.io and were convinced that their platform would be perfect for us, a remote-first company. In order to increase our chances of finding the perfect gem, we also decided to post the opportunity on GitHub Jobs and JSRemotely too.

Things were simple, I created an alias to receive the job applications. This alias redirected enquiries to Antoine, our Senior Frontend Engineer, and me; he was to be in charge of the first steps, selection and the first interview.

We understood, pretty quickly, that we were not enough prepared.

After 3 days, we had received 250+ applications; after 1 week, 500+; and after 2 weeks, we were at ~900. This is without including the LinkedIn and Twitter messages.

A screenshot of Gmail inbox.

Time to investigate some real processes

After a couple of days, Antoine and I spoke; we were both excited and overwhelmed. We knew that we couldn't review every application. We needed help.

A week later, I'd put together a survey, using Typeform. It would ask some of the questions we usually asked during an interview:

  • Do you know Gatsby, ReactJS, Styled Components, GraphQL, TypeScript, Tailwind CSS, ...?
  • Are you willing to work in the European Timezone?
  • What's your GitHub handle?
A screenshot of a Typeform survey.

I then found a way to send this Typeform to all the existing applicants as well as the new. Within a week it started to get responses; this helped us a lot.

My mailbox was being filled with messages like:

or

But at least we could keep track of them all and could filter applicants to meet our needs.

In total, we got 430 responses.

The standard of applicants was impressive, and we were lucky enough to make the final choice from amongst these amazing candidates, from all over the world!

Lessons Learned

  • Reply to everyoneOne thing I've noticed, is that there is nothing more frustrating than not being given feedback after submitting an application. We tried to reply as fast as possible, to the survey after 1 week and we sent rejection emails after 2.
  • Get ready for applicationsSet up a Typeform, that will be your first line of defense. Get candidates to go straight to it and answer your very first questions there. Have the replies sent directly to something like Google Sheets or Airtable (there is an integration for both in Typeform).
  • Share and be transparentWe have a blog; our blog post, sharing how we work and our company culture, has been looked at quite a lot in the past few days. Sharing and being transparent is very important for candidates. They want to know as much as possible about you before they apply.
  • Remote jobs is great to get the best candidatesWe are still relatively unknown and yet we received quite a lot of applications. We've been really impressed by the levels of engagement of some candidates.
A screenshot of our "Thank you" message.
A screenshot of our "Thank you message (2)

Conclusion

Out of this, we hired Rien Coertjens, at first with a short and specific mission. We have been very happy with him and we decided to hire Rien full-time.

Of course, our process is far from being perfect; we may have rejected some great candidates who would have been fantastic fits for us. Some applicants may not have understood the reasons why they didn't make it to the next cut, and I'm really sorry about this. We had to make some tough decisions, but it was simply not manageable otherwise.

But...

You can keep an eye on our current openings on our careers page.

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