I really hope the best for Oxide and applaud their compensation model.
I applied to one of their roles which required me to write about 10 pages of text to answer all their questions... which I think is a big ask but I did it because "why not".
They took over 3 months to get back to me, but at least they got back to me (with an apology and a polite "no").
It's not saying that doing so is a requirement, it's saying that, if you have a degree, the fact that you have one is more important than where it is from.
I dropped out of school, had terrible grades, and ended up going back and finishing, but still got like a 2.something GPA. The subject of school never came up. When I review applicants, I don't rate them poorly if they didn't get a degree.
That's totally fair! I just sympathize with gp as the quoted section and the sentence that emphasizes "completion" from the last paragraph are easy to misinterpret as "you should have finished a four-year degree".
e: hopefully clearer, but tired and still commenting on the internet, so who knows. =)
Looks coherent and well considered to me. Oxide can't really get away with hiring friendly-but-incompetent. I liked this section from the written part, that looks worth doing as a self reflection exercise.
> What work have you found most challenging in your career and why?
> What work have you done that you are particularly proud of and why?
> When have you been happiest in your professional career and why?
> When have you been unhappiest in your professional career and why?
Three months is long. We are upfront that the process takes a while. Part of the reason is that while we ask a lot of people, we also then give a lot: reviewing everyone's materials takes a significant amount of time. But the goal is usually half of that, six weeks or so.
I applied to one of their roles which required me to write about 10 pages of text to answer all their questions... which I think is a big ask but I did it because "why not".
They took over 3 months to get back to me, but at least they got back to me (with an apology and a polite "no").