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      Entrevista para Data Scientist

      9 sep 2013
      Empleado anónimo
      Menlo Park, CA
      Oferta aceptada
      Experiencia positiva
      Entrevista difícil

      Solicitud

      Me postulé en línea. El proceso tomó 3 semanas. Acudí a una entrevista en Meta (Menlo Park, CA)

      Entrevista

      This was for the data scientist/business analytics role. a little background on me: I just received my bachelors. I do not know if what I say will necessarily be applicable to people in a different situation. Starting from the beginning: I applied cold with my resume through their website. Then there was an optional coding question. Pro tip: Do it. The question was a bit more difficult than your average weed out question. The question was a game theory - esque question, e.g. "given these rules of a game and a starting point, tell me whether player 1 or player 2 will win". They gave me 2 hours for the question. I spent about 45 minutes thinking/writing code (final solution was about 25 lines of python code, the idea was the tricky part), then 15 minutes commenting code and trying to make it look pretty. Another pro tip: The question is timed. try to finish as fast as possible while still giving a solid solution/explanatory comments. Within a few days (maybe one or two) I was contacted by a Facebook recruiter to set up a a phone or 1:1 onsite interview, I opted for the phone interview. The recruiters are awesome/responsive. If they're not responding they're likely in meetings, don't fret. You will be talking with the recruiters quite a bit. They set up phone calls with you (not interviews) just to get a sense of who you are throughout the process. Be friendly and convey your excitement. The phone interview: It was not crazy difficult for me. There's obviously no hard tips I can give you aside from 1) try not to let the phone go silent, always be telling them what you're thinking about, even while writing code. Justify it line by line, this way if you mess up along the way they can point it out before you dig the hole too deep. Then again, don't expect them to point out every error you make. 2) Expect a mathematical question. It won't be some stupid straight coding question like "reverse the words in this string". This interview was a while ago, but i'll try to recall the general structure of it. They ask you some sql like query questions. I didn't know sql, so I answered in python. They asked me to code the question in a shared doc, then after I got the right solution they asked me to answer (verbally) a mathematical elaboration of that question. This elaboration lead into a discussion, and then questions from my end. Soon after I was asked to come in for an onsite interview. It was a greet with my recruiter, then 5 interviews with no break for lunch (which I would recommend). The interviews were a lot of fun. It was 2-3 data science type of people, a product manager, and a staff data scientist. I signed an NDA so I can't tell you what they asked me but the recruiter will tell you the general type of questions they ask. Some questions involved writing code, some didn't. All of them felt like a discussion. (e.g. I offer an important component about answering the question, and they say "but what about this case where your component doesn't help?" and you iterate.) They work heavily with sql, but they don't count it against you if you don't know it. Use whatever language you feel most comfortable in. Tips: Don't be nervous. Smile, I can't say this enough. If you act like you're being shot at it will make the process painful. I even made a few jokes and so did my interviewers. Don't be afraid to laugh, this isn't an interrogation. If you're excited about the job, they'll be able to tell. Don't beat around the bush/avoid questions. I had 10 minutes left in an interview and my interviewer asked if I wanted to stop and ask him questions, I said "no, I like your questions, let's keep going". That kind of excitement will shine through and make the interview feel natural. Just keep calm and keep it conversational. Ask for clarification on a question if you're even slightly unclear about the problem. Try to keep talking/express what you're thinking during the entire process. Also, be creative, they're looking for that. Most importantly, try to honestly convey your passion/excitement for the job. These guys love their job and want to see that you will too. That being said, don't fake it. Your interviewers are ridiculously smart so you won't be able to fool them. Good luck!

      Preguntas de entrevista [1]

      Pregunta 1

      They honestly give you a good feel for the types of questions they'll be asking. No surprises. "Most difficult" is so subjective it's meaningless in this context. I hope you're good at math/computer science. If you've had some meaningful machine learning experience, you'll be set.
      Responder pregunta
      24

      Otras evaluaciones sobre las entrevistas para el cargo de Data Scientist en Meta

      Entrevista para Data Scientist

      19 jun 2026
      Empleado anónimo
      Oferta aceptada
      Experiencia neutra
      Entrevista difícil

      Solicitud

      Acudí a una entrevista en Meta

      Entrevista

      Tough interview overall—definitely not what I expected. The technical rounds were intense, particularly when they had me design an A/B test for the News Feed ranking algorithm. I had to discuss metrics and sample sizes in detail. Lucky for me, the time I spent on PracHub right before the interview helped me nail that deep-dive question as it mirrored what I practiced. The behavioral questions felt standard but were still challenging. After a whirlwind process, they extended an offer, which I happily accepted.

      Preguntas de entrevista [1]

      Pregunta 1

      Design an A/B test to evaluate a new ranking algorithm for the Facebook News Feed. Walk through metric selection (engagement, time-spent, MSI, well-being), unit of randomization given network effects between friends, sample size and power calculations, how you'd detect novelty effects vs. true lift, and how you'd handle a guardrail metric regressing while the primary metric is up.
      Responder pregunta

      Entrevista para Data Scientist

      11 jun 2026
      Empleado anónimo
      Cambridge, MA
      Oferta aceptada
      Experiencia positiva
      Entrevista difícil

      Solicitud

      Acudí a una entrevista en Meta (Cambridge, MA)

      Entrevista

      Total 7 rounds: first round for resume screening, second for technical screening, then for on-site virtual with 4 interviews back to back, then hiring manager round after team matching and then salary negotiation with HR

      Preguntas de entrevista [1]

      Pregunta 1

      Meta’s evaluation rubrics focus heavily on "Product Thinking over Fancy Math". Interviewers want to see if you can operate like a product owner with an analytical mindset, navigating messy scenarios affecting billions of users
      Responder pregunta

      Entrevista para Data Scientist

      23 may 2026
      Empleado anónimo
      Menlo Park, CA
      Oferta aceptada
      Experiencia neutra
      Entrevista difícil

      Solicitud

      Acudí a una entrevista en Meta (Menlo Park, CA)

      Entrevista

      The Interview Process is very structured - First Tech Screening round - 45 mins (usually can extend a bit depending on the interviewer) - 2 SQL Questions ( Medium to Hard ) - based on Joins Full Loop - 4 rounds 45 mins each. - SQL - Behavioral - Analytical Execution - stats & prob, A/B testing, case study - Analytical Reasoning - Case study

      Preguntas de entrevista [1]

      Pregunta 1

      Questions on Bayes Theorem, Probability distribution, etc.
      Responder pregunta

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