For example: I recently turned to reddit because I was looking for a foam roller to resolve some IT band issues from running, and ended up finding a stretching routine that has fixed my problem without buying anything.
Either way, I think this is really cool and bypassing the nonsense that google is becoming is a winning path.
Often it's a huge plus as it tells you that the candidate has, at some point, had to think holistically about a business. Doesn't matter if it succeeded or failed so long as you can speak to the experience and the lessons learned.
1. Cold weather operation. I get you're saying the units are good down to -15f, but there's nothing like the fact that I can talk to plenty of other people who have good experiences with Hyperheat at -15f to ensure that they'll actually work. Given I'm using these primarily for heat (the AC is a bonus), if they didn't heat well and efficiently at 0f then it was all pointless. 2. Repairability. Again, given I'm trying to use these as my primary heat, I need to know I'll have someone who will service the unit who can be here in a matter of hours. This is why I went away from the DIY route. Most installers around here (semi-rural New England) are super brand aligned and won't service the stuff they don't install.
Would be happy to help with user research if you're looking for folks to talk to.
There's the easy stuff: "ninja" for example. Nobody, in the year 2023, should be using that word in a job post.
But then there's the hard stuff that really matters. If you want someone who has experience being a "white hat" hacker, that's perfectly alright, but if you want "white people only" well that's obviously bad. If you don't flag the latter you look like a joke, but if you flag every instance of the word "white" then it feels overbearing and like the tool isn't very smart.
I'm pretty sure these will never actually be useful on a superficial word-matching basis. They need to look at broader phrases and context.
And then there's the real problem that even if the tool helps the hiring manager / recruiter sweep their inbuilt biases under the rug to get better applicants, they're still the ones making the hiring decisions.
The best I've found on the subject is Steven Pressfield's The War of Art https://blackirishbooks.com/product/the-war-of-art/
PTO is one of those things where, to misuse the quote, 'good fences make good neighbors.' A reasonable set of requirements and limits can reduce the guesswork, preserve relationships, and make it so people actually use their PTO.