This is also a good way for the prospective employee to understand what kind of work environment they'd be getting into. If the CEO interrupts me on Sunday to tell me something that's not urgent (and what could possibly be urgent if I don't even work there yet?), my response will be, "Sorry, I'm not interested in this job anymore." There, I just escaped a workaholic CEO who thinks that my entire life should belong to her company.
So ummm how much is the CEO paid vs those workers? Give me 7 figures and I will gladly "always think a lot about work" for a year or two.
> CEO thinks about her job constantly and wants young people who do the same. She will message potential candidates at odd hours and they have 3 hours to respond.
I personally don't think that she will get far and I'm guessing that most of us on here agree.
No. No it's not. Perhaps yes if you're a masochist, but for the majority of us it's a no.
No job is worth this.
I rarely respond to any message on my phone outside "normal" hours .. with a couple exceptions (one being my wife)
And messages from unknown numbers? They get filed to possibly never be responded to (possibly blocked)
As a night owl,I've noticed people who get up in the morning have life worked out way better than me.
If the ceo text people at 3am, excluded anyone awake to respond, and upmarked anyone who responded before 8, it would be a good cultural fit test for some places!
(I can think of one place that I wish had detected me as ' not likely to attend unofficially mandatory 8am scrums and saved some stress)
Response: "Please consider my application withdrawn."
If your call someone who is not a founder, during off hours, it is better to be super urgent and means that something went terribly wrong in the management layer.
If you flip the scrk
As the basecamp folks said, "Fire the workaholics."