I find it funny that startups only implement these ridiculous hiring practices after they start to grow. Imagine if the founders had to quiz each other on algorithms before they agreed to do a startup in the first place. The first few hires at a startup are arguably the most important, yet they don't go through the bullshit that later stage startups put potential employees do.
> I find it funny that startups only implement these ridiculous hiring practices after they start to grow
Hmm, I'm curious what you're assuming! At Asana, at least, our first hires went through many of the same questions that interviewers today go through, but we were just a lot less systematic about our evaluation and less scrupulous about accidentally testing for knowledge/context rather than ability. The intention of this guide was to make the interview /less/ bullshit-y, by giving people enough grounding to not be thrown off by unexpressed expectations.