How Would You Move Mount Fuji?: Microsoft's Cult of the Puzzle by William Poundstone

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  • Pub. Date: May 2003
  • 288pp
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: May 2003
    • Publisher: Little, Brown & Company
    • Format: Hardcover, 288pp

    Synopsis

    Microsoft's interview process is a notoriously grueling sequence of brain-busting questions that separate the most creative thinkers from the merely brilliant.

    Publishers Weekly

    Anyone who's interviewed for a job at Microsoft is intimately familiar with questions like the one in this book's title. They've probably also pondered such problems as why are manhole covers round? how do they make M&Ms? what does all the ice in a hockey rink weigh? how many piano tuners are there in the world? Questions like these, which test problem-solving abilities, not specific competencies, are de rigueur at job interviews at Microsoft, other tech firms and on Wall Street. In this hybrid book-it's at once a study of corporate hiring, an assessment of IQ testing's value, a history of interviewing and a puzzle book-science writer Poundstone (Carl Sagan: A Life in the Cosmos) explains the thinking behind this kind of interviewing. In straightforward prose, Poundstone describes the roots of logic questions in interviews (the approach appears to have had its modern beginnings at Shockley Semiconductor Laboratory in 1957), drawing on the history of IQ testing in hiring interviews, psychological studies and interviews with Microsoft ex-interviewers and interviewees, makes a strong case for eliminating standard questions like "What are your strengths and weaknesses?" and replacing them with logic puzzles. Almost half of the book is devoted to an "answer" section, where Poundstone gives possible solutions to the brainteasers. Although it lacks a specific focus, this is a fun, revealing take on an unusual subject. (May 1) Forecast: Puzzle enthusiasts, human resources managers and job seekers are a natural fit for this. Ads in Business 2.0, Fortune and Time will target business readers, and an author tour to Los Angeles, San Francisco and Seattle should attract tech-minded buyers. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

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    How Would You Move Mount Fuji?: Microsoft's Cult of the Puzzleby Anonymous

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    August 18, 2003: An excellent work; interesting; thought-provoking; tractable; and genuinely helpful: Poundstone goes far, far beyond the conventional job interview prep-books that advise readers to use action words or to prepare stock answers for hackneyed questions. And Poundstone goes beyond the usually puzzle books, too. Poundstone is focused on the value of demonstrable clear thinking for businesses, job seekers, and candidate interviewers. Poundstone starts with a brief history of the evolution of intelligence tests, thought-provoking interview questions and puzzles, and their values and weaknesses. There is a long list of sample questions and puzzles--more examples than one would see in a lifetime of interviewing--and a separate chapter with answers and (more importantly) explanations of the logic need to get to the answer, if there is one. Of course, interviewers are searching for the same strengths in problem solving that they hope candidates can and will apply to their new jobs, if hired. After answering many of the sample questions, certain patterns form. Poundstone then talks about these ?meta-puzzles,? that is the fundamental and generic roots of many puzzles and questions, so the reader can prepare for twists and restatements of puzzles. Finally there are excellent resource and bibliography sections. This book is not bedtime reading; it is vigorous mental exercise: Prepare paper and pen to scratch and to scribble all possible outcomes to a few questions, and thus find remarkable solutions. Put yourself in the situation, to see as an uninterested overhead observer cannot. Imagine all possible outcomes--including the right one--to avoid obvious (and incorrect) answers. Alternate between the real-world and mathematical-analogies. Persevere. (Poundstone makes much of the value of demonstrating good reasoning skills, but without perseverance there are few good answers. Equally important for job seekers and candidate evaluators, the absence or presence of both perseverance and clear thinking says something profound about future performance, work, and suitability. You may be surprised at the effort required by 1 or 2 minutes of concentration and work on some solutions.) Remember, as far as some computer companies are concerned, solutions are preferred when they use classic programming techniques like reiteration, recursion, working backwards, counting in binary, and manipulating many cases and big numbers. See if you have ?similar but different? solutions. And see if you too challenge some of Poundstone?s ?answers?: Everest is not 35,000 feet high. A truly ?infinite? series has unlimited terms, not just many. Four chasing dogs will meet almost immediately in a small 3-foot cage; take longer-and-longer in a larger-and-larger fenced farm; and never meet when rendered into small imaginary dots in an unending geometric spiral.