Ir al contenidoIr al pie de página
  • Empleos
  • Empresas
  • Sueldos
  • Para empleadores

      Impulsa tu carrera profesional

      Averigua cuánto podrías ganar, encuentra el empleo perfecto y comparte información sobre tu vida laboral y personal de forma anónima.

      employer cover photo
      employer logo
      employer logo

      BMO US

      Parte de BMO Financial Group

      ¿Esta es tu empresa?

      Información
      Evaluaciones
      Pago y prestaciones
      Empleos
      Entrevistas
      Entrevistas
      Búsquedas relacionadas: Evaluaciones de BMO US | Empleos en BMO US | Sueldos en BMO US | Prestaciones en BMO US
      Entrevistas en BMO USEntrevistas para el cargo de Principal Cloud Engineer en BMO USEntrevista en BMO US


      Glassdoor

      • Acerca de
      • Premios
      • Blog
      • Contacto

      Empleadores

      • Cuenta de empleador gratuita
      • Centro de empleador

      Información

      • Ayuda
      • Pautas
      • Condiciones de uso
      • Privacidad y opciones de anuncios
      • No vender ni compartir mi información
      • Herramienta de autorización de cookies

      Trabaja con nosotros

      • Anunciantes
      • Oportunidades laborales
      Descargar aplicación

      • Buscar por:
      • Empresas
      • Empleos
      • Ubicaciones

      Copyright © 2008-2026. Glassdoor LLC. "Glassdoor", "Worklife Pro", "Bowls" y sus logotipos son marcas comerciales registradas de Glassdoor LLC.

      Empresas seguidas

      Sigue a tus empresas favoritas para estar al tanto de las últimas oportunidades y disponer de información desde adentro.

      Búsquedas de empleo

      Recibe recomendaciones y actualizaciones personalizadas al iniciar tu búsqueda.

      Entrevista para Principal Cloud Engineer

      4 de sept de 2024
      Candidato de entrevista anónimo
      Sin ofertas
      Experiencia negativa
      Entrevista promedio

      Solicitud

      Acudí a una entrevista en BMO US

      Entrevista

      Be careful, odd experience. Submitted resume, recruiter reached out and it was all very exciting when talking about salary and role details, which seemed very tailored to the info on my resume (verbally, not in the online JD). I had an interview with someone who is not as experienced as me where he asked a lot of specific questions on how to do certain things on my resume. The biggest red-flag for me was the fact that the interviewer was asking architectural and work-flow questions about services that he said already existed in their department with active project groups ongoing that reported to him (because of course, he is a very important person). Questions that someone would ask a support team while trying to get something working or needed a smart sounding strategy to tell executives, like a proposal for what they plan to do as an SOW. That didn't quite hit me until a day or two after the interview. He wouldn't need basic architectural setup information about services on which they already had active projects running, at least not the kind he was asking about. It's a blurry area, but the dialog wasn't in a way where someone was trying to test your expertise so that they could be sure you'd be able to contribute to the projects, it was in a way where someone was trying to get clarification on something they didn't know about or couldn't get working. There were also other standard red-flags like, being late to the meeting, making you wait another couple minutes while he "finishes up this quick task", cutting you off often before you finish one answer and going back to other support help questions - these are typical micro-bullying and manipulation tactics people use to keep you off balance and to get information. Sometimes that doesn't register in the moment when your brain is in "techy mode" and just working through problems, plus it's a tech job interview - so that's theoretically the whole point of the meeting. I always kick myself later when I don't detect and act on it in the moment. Plus this guy was not dressed well (like he just rolled out of bed), had lots of twitchy nervous behavior, and even had a little bit of a competitive vibe with me, which does not make sense. Before the interview, the recruiter said he wanted to circle up for mutual feedback, regardless if they wanted to move forward with the position, which I thought was a positive thing and would add value to doing any interview - but he didn't return the follow up call or email, so essentially ghosted. Which is typically fine, but not if you explicitly initiate and set an expectation to touch base afterwards. All of this is typical in corporate tech these days, but I didn't expect it from an established bank, which comes with a lot of reputation liability in that sector, at least not from the get-go during the interview process. Be sure to force them to fully describe the role a couple times to see if it matches; it didn't match the couple times I brought it up. Get all the usual questions answered before going deep into your tech ideas and details. i.e. what's the report hierarchy, what department, and anything associated with visibility. Don't blow through the typical petty micro-bully nonsense and at least get the satisfaction of pointing them out in real-time (politely) so you can see them squirm and try to weasel out of it. All notes to my past self, ha. Good luck out there, gang.

      Preguntas de entrevista [2]

      Pregunta 1

      Given the description of our systems, describe some projects you've worked on that are similar.
      1 respuesta

      Pregunta 2

      How would you plan to segregate user access across business unit customers for [x] cloud service.
      1 respuesta
      1

      Las mejores empresas en cuanto a "Remuneración y prestaciones" cerca de ti

      avatar
      Standard Bank Group
      4.0★Remuneración y prestaciones
      avatar
      Bank of America
      3.8★Remuneración y prestaciones
      avatar
      Wells Fargo
      3.7★Remuneración y prestaciones
      avatar
      World Bank Group
      3.9★Remuneración y prestaciones