Not long ago, weeding through DBA applicants with a tech interview was a
straightforward process. You'd ask candidates 200 or so technical questions. If they
got 100 correct answers, you knew they'd been around the block; 150 or more and
you knew you were on to superior talent. But once the Oracle Certification Program
(OCP) became popular in the late 90s, the traditional tech interview lost its
effectiveness. These days, candidates can answer 180 questions correctly and you
still won't know whether they're talking from experience or simply regurgitating
what they memorized at OCP a few weeks earlier. Although it has become
increasingly difficult to determine whether you've found a seasoned, highly qualified
DBA or a newly minted OCP Graduate, there are ways.
First, start by throwing out the questions. Any candidate who has been through OCP
knows the answers-all of them. That list that helped you find superstar employees
in the past is unfortunately useless now. Second, if you are a manager without solid
database experience, enlist the help of an experienced DBA to help you prepare that
critical interview. IT Managers have varied backgrounds and here it's important to
pull from the right background, be it yours or someone else's.
You also need to analyze your needs. If you're looking to hire a junior person and
mentor them, the OCP program ensures that the candidate has been exposed to
most areas of the Oracle RDBMS. You can assume you'll have an employee who
knows the commands and has a general concept of how a database works. But if
you select an inexperienced OCP candidate thinking you're getting a skilled veteran,
you'll be in for countless unpleasant surprises. Typical horror stories sound like:
A DBA restores the backup for the first time in a real-life situation, finds out the
backup strategy was flawed and loses the whole database. S/he probably also forgot
to make a backup of the database before attempting the recovery, therefore
rendering Oracle support intervention nearly impossible.
A DBA recommends technical implementation decisions based on limited experience
with a single user database that has 10 tables of 100 rows each. Of course, the
system hangs a few hours after the launch-as soon as 10,000 users start pounding
on a 500GB database.
The most damaging aspect of newer DBAs is that they don't know when they are in
over their heads, or how to plan properly. Senior IT professionals, no matter their
field of expertise, have a gut feeling when it's happening. They know they have to
step away, talk things over with a peer, roll everything back, and try another day.
Inexperienced IT professionals are fearless and can therefore be dangerous,
especially if they're expected to run the show.
So how do you find truly qualified DBAs in an OCP World? Put them to work-in the
interview, that is. Create real world situations where candidates are allowed full use
of any familiar online resources, and see what they can do. Some examples:
Want to check out their data modeling skills? Give candidates a hypothetical
business that everyone understands, like a video rental store, and a basic set of
business requirements. Put them in front of a white board and let them create a
model that meets the stated requirements. You play the role of a subject-matter
expert who is decidedly non-technical, and have them walk you through the results.
Wondering how they handle troubleshooting? Set up a database with various
performance anomalies such as poorly written queries, missing indexes, and
internal resource contention. Have applicants deal with the issues and walk you
through their methodology. They can't use automated tools. The Oracle Data
Dictionary and OS basic facilities must suffice.
Want to see if they know how to minimize downtime? Pretend you're a client who
wants to upgrade a 500GB database from version X to version X+1. It's a 24/7
environment and each hour of downtime costs $10,000. There will be downtime
regardless, but the DBA should be able to generate scenarios to keep it at a
minimum.
Whatever skills you're looking to assess, make sure you test candidates in situations
they can't prepare for and can't fake. The new interview process isn't quite as easy
as those trusty old 200 questions. It requires more up-front planning and often
more time in the interview room. But if it saves you from having to fire incapable
employees who wreaked havoc on your database, it's probably worth it. A little
advance preparation can save a whole lot of time, money, and hassle down the road.
And isn't that all we're looking for in this crazy, mixed-up OCP world?
Robert Hamel
DBA Team Lead
Rob has served as the applications architect for one of the largest government
databases in the world, as well as a primary architect on a database with one of the
world's highest record of transactions per second. Before joining The Pythian Group in 2000, he worked for numerous
corporations and government agencies, including Human Resources and
Development Canada and Elections Canada. An acknowledged expert in the field,
Rob excels in application architecture and application performance tuning.
Rob graduated from the University of Ottawa in 1987 and has been working with
information systems ever since.