Me postulé a través de un reclutador. Acudí a una entrevista en Foodsmart (San Francisco, CA) en jul 2015
Entrevista
Had a lunch with the recruiter, and met with the Director of Engineering for a casual chat. Both very personable, smart, and fun people. I quickly felt that it'd be the right environment for me.
I broke my interview into two days due to time constraints and spent about 2-2.5 hours both times. Each interviewer was clearly an expert in their field. Met with mostly engineers and 1 PM.
Preguntas de entrevista [1]
Pregunta 1
Classical interview questions for software engineering. Questions got harder and more abstract toward the end, with a few NodeJS-specific questions.
Me postulé en línea. El proceso tomó 3 semanas. Acudí a una entrevista en Foodsmart en ago 2023
Entrevista
Initial phone call with the recruiter, who I thought was good at describing the job and communication in general. The next steps he described were a little different than what I understood as not being a pure leetcode round, but that could have been my fault. I unfortunately couldn't find my notes to verify. Either way, you should be prepared for tech rounds if you're interviewing! The second round is the tech round with one of the engineers on the team. Forewarning that I'm a bit biased when it comes to these types of tech interviews, so take that into consideration with what I'm saying. I have done a few hundred leetcode questions in the past (still definitely not an expert), but I don't feel performance on these types of questions is always a good indicator of a good engineer, and I definitely don't think asking leetcode mediums or hards is useful for such a small non-tech company. But everyone has their own idea of how to interview, so to each their own. My experience was somewhat similar to the other software engineer interview listed in Glassdoor, but I wouldn't go as far as to say the guy was rude/uninterested! I would mostly attribute it to the stereotypical social awkwardness some software engineers have; don't take it personal! The engineer didn't really describe the question, but he had it written out in a coderpad page. So you're going to have to sit in silence for a while trying to read through the problem and understand the skeleton code that's already written. I definitely struggled with this question, even after asking my own questions. But I was a little rusty on leetcode, so maybe someone who prepared more than me could have fared better. I tried to find this question on leetcode.com and found two that were similar. One was a hard and the other a medium, but I think the question I was asked was a variation of one or the other, or both. I'd probably lean more towards a medium, but who knows. Since I am biased (sorry!) as I mentioned above and was expecting a little bit of an easier interview, I just marked my experience as neutral. Definitely brush up on your leetcode if you want to interview and work here!
El proceso tomó más de 1 semana. Acudí a una entrevista en Foodsmart (San Francisco, CA) en ene 2018
Entrevista
An agency showed me the position and asked if I was interested. I said yes so they submitted my resume to Zipongo. With a day or two (on a Tuesday), Zipongo's Head of Talent called me to talk about the position and the company. We both liked what we heard so the next afternoon I did a phone-screen with one of their Principle Engineers over the phone. We both liked what we heard and their Head of Talent sent me an email later that day asking when I was available. I gave her some days, including the next day. That evening I got an email confirming my on-site interview for the next morning (Thursday). I arrived, went through the process, and left feeling quite excited about the company and position. That Friday I was told that they were excited about me and wanted me to talk with their CEO as the final step. My agency asked for my references, which I sent over to them. That evening I was scheduled to talk with their CEO the following Tuesday evening. After talking with him on the phone for about 45 minute (15 minutes longer than scheduled), I got off the phone really liking him. The next morning I was asked for times to discuss the verbal offer. I scheduled that call for later in the evening. Their offer was quite generous and I accepted a few days later after several rounds of email asking specific questions about it.
Preguntas de entrevista [1]
Pregunta 1
Since I was specifically interviewing for an internationalization position, it went something like: "What considerations would you expect to deal with internationalizing a JS/Node based web application"