Updated
Updated · ZME Science · Jun 24
Google Dropped Hiring Brainteasers in 2013 After Analysis Found 0 Predictive Value
Updated
Updated · ZME Science · Jun 24

Google Dropped Hiring Brainteasers in 2013 After Analysis Found 0 Predictive Value

1 articles · Updated · ZME Science · Jun 24

Summary

  • Google’s People Operations team ended the company’s once-famous brainteaser interview questions in 2013 after an internal review deemed them a “complete waste of time.”
  • That analysis found the puzzles had roughly zero value in predicting future job performance, undercutting questions meant to test creativity, logic and composure under pressure.
  • Google had popularized prompts such as the blender escape, golf balls in a bus and the 2-egg, 100-story problem during its 2000s hiring boom.
  • The company shifted toward structured interviews, work samples and predefined scoring rubrics focused on role knowledge, cognitive ability, leadership and “Googleyness.”
  • The change reflected a broader hiring lesson: quirky puzzles can reward prior exposure and impress interviewers without showing whether a candidate will perform well at work.

Insights

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