Ask HN: How are you preparing for interviews nowadays?

Hey all, just wondering how you're preparing for interviews in 2026? I'm assuming system design plays a larger role and the bar is probably higher across all levels. Do I still need to grind leetcode?

11 points | by holden_nelson 1 day ago

10 comments

  • markus_zhang 1 day ago
    I’m not preparing much because I have quite a few years of experience under my belt.

    Basically I read the JD, find some stories from my work that I can tell, brush up the CV for a bit and then that’s it. I don’t prepare for LC interviews and if I get one I just decline.

  • mts_building 1 day ago
    Most interviews ask for a motivational letter. You can use give an AI the job description with a list of experiences you have, tools you know, manage, etc. As AI gives you this nice summary, you can expand on each elements whether alone or again with an AI and without learning it, making sure you know it more or less so you can go to the interview ready to talk and answer questions.
  • vishnukool 12 hours ago
    System design definitely carries more weight now but Leetcode has not totally vanished. It's just evolved.
  • markboo 1 day ago
    As a tech lead, from last year, all my new hire interview is fundamentally changed, no concept, no algo, no design. Just a real world problem, even not clearly defined yet, allow candidate use any AI tool they like, ask me questions or do research for problem clarification, and work it out. I'm watching all this process in 1-1.5 hours to see if he is a problem solver. 99% will be solved by AI with your proactivaly and smart prompt or questions in current work, so the thinking and prompting process is key.
    • nm980 1 day ago
      > 99% will be solved by AI with your proactivaly and smart prompt or questions in current work, so the thinking and prompting process is key.

      I am still a junior but this seems like you are interviewing the AI rather than the candidate. Also why bother with a technical interview if you expect AI to do their job?

      • markboo 1 day ago
        Actually not a real technical interview for this case, it's a real world problem solving, including business analysis(for the uncleared problem), coding, and testing to deliver to me. What I'm looking for a individual builder(or a one-person tech team) instead of an expert on a specific tech stack.
        • red-iron-pine 1 day ago
          so then what do you do if you need an expert on a specific tech stack?

          we got database and mainframe legacy code and I need someone who gets that world, not a plucky undergrad who is strong in "prompt engineering"

      • shaewest 1 day ago
        It's interviewing the capacity to use the tools in a useful manor rather testing the tools themselves.
    • sedev 1 day ago
      How has that worked out? What are you looking at when you compare that to what you were doing before last year?
    • VirusNewbie 1 day ago
      This is so fucking dumb you're going to hire a candidate who got A/B tested into the 'smarter' SoTA model or something.
    • francisklaus9 23 hours ago
      [flagged]
    • fatata123 1 day ago
      [dead]
  • recursivecaveat 1 day ago
    My employer's process is basically exactly the same: leetcode, system design, behavioural; we just tell candidates not to use AI. Hiring is one of the scarier decisions a manager can make so I think they will stay pretty conservative. Personally my philosophy is that the interview is an information-gathering session, not a workday simulation. So it makes sense to test your fundamentals even if in practice you may be delegating them most of the time.
  • kentich 1 day ago
    Leetcode is implicit IQ testing. That is why they will likely keep it despite AI.
    • tptacek 1 day ago
      If you're hiring software developers and you care about IQ, you don't need to test it implicitly; you can safely test for it explicitly, and there are several large, deep-pocketed plaintiffs lawyer targets who routinely do so. The idea that general cognitive testing is verboten in US employment is almost entirely an Internet myth.

      People use Leetcode because they believe it tests for programming aptitude.

      • fintech_eng 22 hours ago
        Indeed, there are even SaaS companies that will set it all up for you! I recently went through rounds that had a pretty blatant basic IQ test. I pushed back many times but the recruiter insisted it was required. I eventually complied, but it felt weird. I worry now my IQ score is in some database forever attached to recruiter's candidate profiling systems.
        • tptacek 22 hours ago
          I don't think I'd do it and I know I'd think much less of any company that used general cognitive testing as part of their candidate qualification process (I'd be working with a team of coworkers that were basically selected by astrology), but it is lawful to run a hiring process for a knowledge work job that way.

          It's still not sinking in, 75 years after W. Edwards Deming, that the reliable way to hire people is simply to audition them doing the actual work their role involves.

      • kentich 1 day ago
        Nope, you'll get a lawsuit for discrimination if you explicitly test for IQ. That's why they do it implicitly. The scheme is very simple: hire people with the highest IQ, and since they have high IQ, they will figure at least something out.
        • tptacek 1 day ago
          This is obviously not true. The companies that administer general cognitive testing for employment literally have logo crawls on their front pages, full of companies your mom has heard of.
      • VirusNewbie 1 day ago
        It tests for multiple things, at its best: A basic work ethic to understand fundamental CS concepts. Sure maybe plenty of people can't write a binary search in two minutes unless they practice live coding a bit, but plenty of people do study, so it self selects for that type.

        There are also people who, no matter what, could not live code simple tree traversals or bin search or something, and it filters on that.

        Finally, there's a pattern matching aspect to it. Some of the best interview questions I got involved very simple algorithms, but it was obfuscated by the problem. So the 'trick' was to just think through the problem and ask questions. Not to have memorized something obscure.

  • isaisabella 1 day ago
    Maybe AI-assisted coding? I just interviewed with Amazon and they are quite looking on how you use AI to finish a task with a wide scope. Leetcode is not the main part now though.
    • Meliwat 1 day ago
      I had just interviewed with Amazon and it was purely leetcode, with the exception of their leadership principle question. What role did you apply to?
      • isaisabella 1 day ago
        SWE internship, but the team is focusing on machine learning
  • rolph 1 day ago
    be ready for zingers, like " what benefit do i get if i hire you for thousands of dollars a month, instead of paying a couple hundred for a few AI sessions?"
    • t23414321 1 day ago
      If you like to be one of "AI coders .. carrying half-open laptops" I could let you do the same with the lid closed ?

      https://www.businessinsider.com/coders-keep-laptops-open-in-... ;)))

    • ipaddr 1 day ago
      Just tell them they will feel better about the money they spent on the ad.
    • holden_nelson 1 day ago
      did someone actually ask you that?
      • rolph 1 day ago
        no, but i would make plans for an answer somewhat better than " i dont know, thanks for your time."

        such as " hiring me will ensure that your AI sessions are few and limited to a couple hundred dollars expense, bare minimum, a human must prompt an AI or it does nothing. as a [professional] i have insight regarding structuring prompts, as well as fast response to code based remediation for incidents involving off the rails output, and abberant alignment adoption."

        also: interviews can be more about,how you respond to being knocked off your footing, rather than gathering rote factoids about "you".

        • scorpioxy 1 day ago
          What about answering something like "I don't know but if the work can be done for hundreds on AI instead of thousands on me then I refuse to let you waste your money like that"?
        • red-iron-pine 1 day ago
          if they're already thinking that, then "thanks for your time" is probably the best choice
  • muzani 1 day ago
    Typical interview types we see:

    Make this thing that would be impossible without AI. The test is to see if you actually architect it properly and understand principles of how things connect together.

    Make this thing that would be impossible without AI. Now make these modifications without any AI.

    Make this thing. You may use low quality AI like Composer 3 or none at all, but if you use none, we'll probably think of you as some kind of boomer.

    Here's a bunch of technical problems that we don't know the answer to. If you give answers or insights we haven't considered, then you're bringing value to the team (e.g. git/PR policy, microservices, feature flagging, localization, security)

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