A Motley Agency recruitment test
This repository contains some small challenges, usually done by potential new hires during our recruitment pipeline.
- Read this README
- Clone the repo (
git clone https://github.com/motleyagency/code-challenge
) - Choose your own adventure
- Frontend test
- Backend test
- Full-stack developer can do both of them!
- If you are applying for a job, make your changes, commit them and send them and a small note describing what
you've done via
- A link to a public GitHub repo
- A link to a private GitHub repo where you add petetnt and valstu as a collaborator
- A link to a public / invite to a private private GitLab/BitBucket repo (or similar)
- Or by email in an archive that includes the
.git
folder to your Motley contact (or the people mentioned in the Help I am stuck-section) with a headline "${YOUR_NAME} - Code challenge
"
If you don't want to do the regular test or want to challenge yourself more, we also appreciate open source contributions! Send us samples of open source work you have done and descriptions what you did and why to your Motley contact person (or the people mentioned in the Help I am stuck-section) and we will continue from there.
If you haven't done open source work before, awesome-for-beginners
repo might be a good start.
Oh no! Send us a message at [email protected] / [email protected] or ping one of us on Twitter (Pete / Valtteri) describing what you've done and what you have tried and we can try to figure out something together.
Sure thing! You might even learn something or remember something you've long forgotten!
Probably yes, but no guarantees! We ❤️ to help other people, but we are also rather busy so something might fall through the cracks. It doesn't mean that we don't appreciate your work though!
Awesome! Post them as a issue or send us a mail and we'll look into it!
The tests resemble the tech stack that is used most commonly in our projects (React, NodeJS, GraphQL...), but if you can implement the same thing in some other relevant language or library/framework go for it! We work with tons of different kinds of stacks all the time from Python to WordPress too.