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Ask HN: How do you identify people with a strong work ethic?

7 points by diweirich 6 years ago · 6 comments · 1 min read


Is work ethic something that can only be seen by working alongside someone?

uberman 6 years ago

What exactly do you mean by "a strong work ethic"?

I ask because I thought opening up this post that I was going to start with an easy answer, but the more I thought about it, the less I was sure what "work ethic" even meant.

So, I looked it up:

"The principle that hard work is intrinsically virtuous or worthy of reward."

So, I came to this post/question absolutely certain that "a strong work ethic" was absolutely something I agreed with and would look for in myself and colleagues. Now, I am not so sure.

Is "hard work intrinsically virtuous"? Is working harder rather than smarter more worthy of reward? There are plenty of jobs where real unpleasant, hard work is required yet is often of little value. The architect will get more reward than the foreman who will in turn get more reward than the person spaying gunite. Life seems full of counter examples to "hard work is intrinsically virtuous".

Even when comparing people in the same job...

Would I rather work with a partner who was "lazy" and produced 10 widgets because they knew how to best use their tools, or would I rather work with someone industrious who produced 10 widgets through sheer force of will? I think the first one rather than the second.

Ultimately (to try to actually answer your question). If I did not know a candidate or their actual "work ethic", I would ask them to tell me about a time/job/project/assignment that was a (potential) failure and what they did during and after the project as it was ending. What did they personally do to mitigate the failure and after the project had ended what did they personally take away from the post mortem.

  • gshdg 6 years ago

    This. What's a strong work ethic and why is it important to you? What makes you think the vast majority of people's work ethics are insufficient for your purposes such that you have to specifically look for people with stronger ones?

    Have you had a problem with hiring people who slack off and get nothing done? Are you asking how you find people who will work 80 hour weeks for months on end without overtime and without quitting on you?

    • diweirichOP 6 years ago

      My goal is to find other freelancers to work alongside that have a similar work ethic. I want to find people who will collaborate and take ownership of a project on an equal level. Ideally people who aim to deliver not just a functioning "widget", but the best widget the client has ever seen.

      • afarrell 6 years ago

        It sounds like you want to ask

        1. What motivates them.

        2. How they communicate in the face of roadblocks.

        -----

        I suspect you want to do more thinking in order to be more precise about what you really want.

  • diweirichOP 6 years ago

    By strong work ethic, I suppose I mean someone who feels compelled to do good work. They feel a responsibility to make sure a task is completed as successfully as possible. An example of bad work ethic to me would be someone who is passive about the outcome of a task, won't take any extra steps to make sure it succeeds.

    To give an example, thinking back to school days when doing a group project. There's the person that ends up doing all the work vs the person that takes advantage and just rides along until they are bugged enough to do something.

    • afarrell 6 years ago

      > someone who feels compelled to do good work. They feel a responsibility to make sure a task is completed as successfully as possible.

      Just because someone feels compelled to do good work does not mean they actually take steps to do good work.

      1) They might neither know how to nor know how to ask.

      2) They might have a problem which is really hard for them to solve but really obvious for everyone else they know -- consequently they don't have anyone they can ask.

      3) They might be deliriously sleep-deprived.

      4) They might have no idea how priorities work.

      5) They might be confused but too embarrassed to ask questions.

      6) They might have fallen behind on their piece due to some normal reasons and then fallen into a spiral of anxiety.

      7) They might be mis-judging how good their work is.

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