I got laid off and realized how broken tech hiring is

In February, I got laid off from a small startup due to budget cuts.

I’m a senior developer with 20 years of experience, and until now I had never really struggled to find a job. Recruiters used to reach out regularly, and opportunities were always there.

This time was different.

After more than 100 applications, I started noticing patterns that didn’t make sense. The same companies reposting the same jobs every day. Listings with hundreds of applicants that never seemed to close. Automated responses, but no real follow-up.

At some point, it felt like I wasn’t applying for jobs anymore, but feeding a system. Resumes parsed by algorithms, filtered by keywords, reduced to a score. No human interaction, just signals and pipelines.

Then came the interviews. Weeks between each round. The same algorithmic problems, disconnected from real-world work. The kind of questions that reward practice, not experience.

I started questioning everything. Not just the process, but how developers are evaluated today.

It feels like the system is optimized to filter people out, not to find the best ones.

I don’t think I can fix it. But I had to adapt to it.

Curious if others here have experienced the same thing recently.

Btw this is happening now in Canada, so I guess it s the same in the US.

6 points | by nirvanist 1 hour ago

6 comments

  • Teknomadix 1 hour ago
    It has been going this way for some time in the US. My own story and experience was very similar to yours. Lost my position as a Sr. Engineer, and while going through that gauntlet of algorithms trying to find a new role, I found a pivot instead. Left the software world of abstractions and optimizations, and brought my skills in physical hardware and machine knowledge to the forefront. Now I work in hard technology. I may be sort of unique in that I had these parallel skillsets and experiences. But it's never too late to learn new skills. What other skills outside of software do you have?
    • nirvanist 1 hour ago
      That’s a great pivot and thank you for your comment at least it s open other point of view

      I’m mostly focused on software full-stack, backend, automation, and building products.

      The problem in my case is that I’m too passionate about it. I was so committed to web and software development that I don’t really have easily transferable skills outside of it.

      I’m currently training for some certifications, but I still feel like it’s not the best use of my time.

      • qup 15 minutes ago
        Find places where you're the most technical person, and you will find your skills have easily transferred.

        I just landed a consulting gig installing network hardware. I'm a full stack web dev like yourself. I did a web project for them before they asked about this one.

        I'm simply the only technical person they know.

        Thankfully, the network requirements are simple enough I could confidently agree.

  • TheOpenSourcer 1 hour ago
    What are you looking for? Maybe I can help. We have a lot of open positions.
    • nirvanist 0 minutes ago
      thank you for the reply

      team lead / full stack / frontend , reactjs , nodejs , reactnative

  • edimaudo 1 hour ago
    A lot of the roles posted are mostly focused on signalling growth. Plus a lot of companies never really learned how to hire, they just followed what ever comes out of silicon valley without thinking about it.
    • nirvanist 1 hour ago
      To be honest, I think ghost offers should be criminalized; they are just playing with people’s lives.
  • rvz 1 hour ago
    The "tech jobs" you are looking for are actually potemkin ghost jobs that are never going to be filled and are only there to give no signal to market traders and analysts whether if the company is hiring or not.
  • ryguz 18 minutes ago
    [dead]
  • oldpersonintx 47 minutes ago
    [dead]