The interview process involved: an initial conversation with the agency recruiter, a meeting with the hiring manager, and a follow‑up panel that included the hiring manager and two team members.
The expectations felt unrealistic. I was given an extremely large take‑home assignment with a two‑day turnaround, and the scope resembled actual project work rather than an interview exercise. Completing it required many hours of unpaid labor, which raised concerns about how the company views candidates’ time and boundaries.
The process also had an elitist tone, particularly in the way the final stage was branded as “Assessing for Awesomeness (A4A).” I understand the desire to hire high performers, but the framing and the scale of the assignment created an uncomfortable dynamic that felt exclusionary rather than motivating.
Another concern is that there was no indication of whether this intensive process actually correlates with better hiring outcomes. There was no data shared about whether candidates who excel in these exercises become top performers, stay longer, or succeed at a higher rate. Without that transparency, the demands of the process felt more performative than meaningful.
Overall, I appreciated the opportunity to interview, but the structure, expectations, and tone of the process did not reflect a balanced or candidate‑friendly approach.