Me postulé en línea. El proceso tomó 6 semanas. Acudí a una entrevista en MetaLab en may 2018
Entrevista
I applied for the position that was listed on the MetaLab website and they got back to me within a week. The initial interview was conducted over video conference with their Director of People Ops.
After that, I was asked to undertake a paid design exercise that they give to all their design applicants. Once I had delivered that, I met with two Design Directors on another video call to review the work and answer/ask questions.
The next and final step was a panel interview with the CEO and two Directors from other disciplines at the company.
The whole process took around 6 weeks, although that was extended to due to me traveling.
From start to finish, the process was incredibly smooth and extremely positive. Everyone I met was amazingly friendly ( those Canadians ;) and I was always promptly followed up with to make sure I was aware of the next steps. It was hands-down the best interview experience I've ever had!
Preguntas de entrevista [2]
Pregunta 1
How would you inspire a team when you're working remotely?
Me postulé a través de un reclutador. El proceso tomó 3 semanas. Acudí a una entrevista en MetaLab (Denver, CO) en jul 2018
Entrevista
A recruiter contacted me via LinkedIn for a product design role and we scheduled a 50 min phone screener. The questions were typical of a recruiter and were not of much substance.
We initially discussed an remote individual contributor role but I inquired about the remote Design Director role and decided that was more appropriate.
The recruiter talked about how MetaLab "does remote right" and I discussed remote work with a MetaLab designer and neither could define what "does remote right" means.
I was given a UI assignment, paid at $30/hr, with a 10hr max and the call ended. The assignment description seemed like it hadn't been updated in several years and was fairly typical for agencies like MetaLab who hire on visual aesthetic alone instead of the why behind the work. Beware of assignments, in general, used as an interview tool. This type of tool does not allow for you to work your process nor work as part of a team and does not represent all of your talent and potential.
After throwing the assignment over the fence, with no opportunity to discuss the decisions behind my work, I receive a cryptic email: "Thank you for your time on the design challenge. We really appreciated your approach, but are going to move forward with other candidates at this time who better fit our needs on the visual / UI side."
These types of responses are fairly common as a part of the job search process and frustrating to the recipient. But it doesn't have to be. I challenge recruiters and hiring managers to rethink the need for design challenges and take-home assignments, give applicants the opportunity to defend and explain their work and put more thought into their rejection responses instead of copy and paste.
Preguntas de entrevista [4]
Pregunta 1
Walk me through one of your projects on your website and talk about your process.