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- What does your team do to help its employees maintain a work-life balance? Notice how the manager reacts and whether they are put off by this type of question.
- Are people responsive via email or email after 5pm and over the weekends? This is a very specific question that will give you a very specific answer.
- How often do you work with people in other timezones? With remote work becoming more and more widespread people often find themselves on early-morning or late-night calls with their co-workers in other countries or states. This is something you might want to know in advance.
- Would this position involve much travel? Even though strictly speaking travel is separate from work hours, too much travel can seriously affect the work-life balance and require that you be available outside of normal working hours.
- Are there certain weeks or months when your team tends to be particularly busy? It’s rare for teams and companies to be busy all the time. But the workload fluctuates a lot. So knowing about the peaks can tell you a lot about what working there will be like.
- When was the last time you did something together as a team? What did you do? The specific questions about the past are better than generic hypothetical questions. Not only you’ll get a sense of how frequently they do something together but also what type of activities they prefer.
- What are some favorite things the team likes to do for offsites? What are some favorite topics the team likes to discuss during lunchtime? This question should help you get to know your future colleagues on a personal level and get a sense of how they like to bond.
- What are some ways in which the team creates a friendly atmosphere? Notice whether the response primarily revolves around work projects or extracurricular activities.
- Do you set individual goals for your team? This should get the conversation started. Follow-up by asking how often they do it and how they do it.
- How many different goals does an average engineer have on your team? This should give you a sense of whether they like to keep things simple or have a long list of priorities?
- What happens if the company or team priorities change mid-quarter? Do they revise the goals? Does everyone still expect you to complete your goals?
- What if someone discovers a better way to achieve the team goal but in a way that makes them fail at their individual goal? This will give you a sense of how flexible the team is and how they balance individual and team goals
- Do you encourage people on your team to give each other feedback? This will help you understand whether this is a priority. Follow-up with “How do you do it?”
- Do you conduct 360 feedback evaluations for your team? You can also ask how often they do it and whether this is something that HR required everyone to do or whether this was the manager’s initiative. The latter will help you understand how important it is for this particular manager and this particular team.
- How many of our team members work from the same office and how many work from home or other office locations? Then, follow-up with clarifying questions about those locations.
- What other teams do engineers often work with? Are those teams based in the same location? Quite often, the engineering team itself is based in one location but other teams you’ll need to work with — such as product managers or even other engineering teams — are based elsewhere.
- What is your work-from-policy? Try to get a sense of whether they have a company-wide, a team-wide, or a case-by-case policy.
- Book: The Culture Map: Breaking Through the Invisible Boundaries of Global Business by Erin Meyer. The author focuses on the differences between nationalities but a similar framework can also apply to differences between teams and companies.
- Book: The Culture Code: The Secrets of Highly Successful Groups by Daniel Coyle. This a broader discussion of company culture and high-performance teams.
- If you want to go really deep, you can look up academic publications on Organizational Culture Profile and Industrial-Organizational Psychology.
At we believe there is a better way. We’re getting companies to share more information about their teams so that job-seekers could learn what it would be like to work on a team before they even apply. Aside from that, engineering teams share their missions, the products they are working on, the tech stack they use, as well as their core values. If this sounds interesting, take a look at . Click on the company cards and then on the team cards to view team missions, tech stack, culture, and values.
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