More specifically
a. How many companies did you apply for?
b. How many companies reached out to you?
c. How many interviews did you typically go through for a company?
d. What were the type of interviews? (Have the number of companies asking leet code questions decreased? haha)
d. How many offers did you get?
e. And finally how did you manage your time with all those interviews and companies?
b: all of them
c: at least 2.
d: see below.
d#2: 2 so far.
e: poorly.
I haven't interviewed properly in 10 years so this experience been a bit of a shock.
1. FAANG: Leetcode hard; failed hard.
2. Another FAANG: everything went ok; eventually rejected. Found through back channels that fudged the system design. Didn't go low enough in the stack .
3. Medium sized company: took a take home. Never heard from them again after 2-3 follows up.
4. Small company: talked to the CTO. Discussed compensation, CTO said I was too expensive (medium salary for Canada)
5. Medium sized company: automated test 3 hours, Java/DynamoDB that I've never done. Why?
6. Small company: conversation with CTO, and dev, no test. Interesting product, pay is not great. Got an offer.
7. Small body shop: 90 minute take home (while recording your screen). Got an offer, way less than discussed.
8. Medium company: zoom tech interview, reasonable questions. moving to "virtual onsite"
9: Medium company: zoom tech interview. failed.
This is over the course of the last 3 weeks.
Some take aways:
- market is hot
- there's absolutely no consistency in the interview process.
- it's hella stressful, impostor syndrome full steam.
- I'm a generalist, so I don't really have a preferred language. Some interviews do pseudocode which is fine, but for interviews where you run code you _MUST_ be fluent in one language. Looking stuff up seems to make a bad impression.
- I spent a few weeks doing leetcode before xmas, and it's certainly been helpful. I'd say most interviews use some sort of algorithmic test as a gatekeeper. You should be able to do easy before you start.
Ans: 0, they reached out to me through linkedin, hired etc..
b. How many companies reached out to you?
Ans: 10-12
c. How many interviews did you typically go through for a company?
Usually 1 screen and 4 rounds onsite (2 coding, 1 sys design, 1 behavior)
d. What were the type of interviews? (Have the number of companies asking leet code questions decreased? haha)
Phone screen was usually some medium leetcode question, on site was one interview had 2 medium leetcode, 1 coding round had some problem which used algorithms but they were mainly looking at your code architecture skills, one round had system design, one behavior which was different across many companies (some had specific questions, some had general we want to talk to you type interviews)
d. How many offers did you get?
1, thats because i quit after 3 onsites, i had 3 more onsites lined up but by this point i ran out of stamina and i really liked the company which gave me an offer.
e. And finally how did you manage your time with all those interviews and companies?
It was like a full time job, i used all my vacation days to switch jobs.
I interviewed more as a favor to someone I knew at the company, but I ended up liking the company. When it came time to talk compensation, I threw what I thought was an FU number at them (i.e. I started my then current job with a max band offer and stock had since doubled) but they ended up agreeing, so I said yes.
a. 0 b. 3 c. 1 d. Three short interviews: two technical and one informal with the CEO. One easy pseudocode problem via shared screen. d. 1 e. PTO
Got showered with dozens of recruiter emails for various companies. As a rule, I generally do not cold apply to any company as my experience has been that doing so is a first class ticket to being ignored.
However I'm also pretty selective as to what companies I'm interested in, so the vast majority I did not proceed with.
1. First interview was with a FAANG, where I failed the phone screen largely due to the interviewer having a thick accent on top of him using a speakerphone that made things worse.
2. Next, had a friend refer me to the FAANG he works at, but was ignored.
3. & 4. Interviewed at two mid tier companies and got lowball offers, so declined. Standard leetcode questions. One of them gave me homework. These happened more or less in parallel, which is rare for me.
Got more bites from three non-FAANGMULA companies that I'd rank as on the same top tier. These also proceeded in parallel.
5. Passed the phone screen for one but failed the virtual on site. Mix of leetcode and JavaScript trivia. The phone screener was a "celebrity engineer" and apparently commented in feedback to the recruiter that I was one of the most talented JavaScript engineers he had ever interviewed. Alas I think what bombed me during the virtual on site was when I was asked to describe one of my previous projects in detail. I choked.
6. Passed phone screen and three different virtual on sites for the second, got offer. Mix of leetcode and JavaScript trivia.
7. Passed the phone screen and the homework for the second. Mix of leetcode and JavaScript trivia. On site got scheduled. But everything was moving very slowly. So I took the offer from the second company.
I'm a frontend/fullstack engineer. Interviews were a mix of leetcode and "do this in JavaScript" type problems. I would say leetcode has lost some of its dominance in my particular niche in favor of these JavaScript trivia type problems.
I'd say the fact that I was WFH due to the pandemic greatly facilitated both the logistics of interviewing and grinding leetcode/JavaScript trivia. I don't think I'm the only one, since my department at my previous company saw a massive exodus of people. I saw more people depart for greener pastures in the summer of 2021 than I saw in my entire 7 year tenure there.
Also, I did two homeworks. Generally I make it a point to simply refuse any homework assignments because they do not s cale (vs. leetcode which hugely scales horizontally). However in the case of one of the mid-tier companies, the assignment was genuinely fun so I accepted it. In the case of the other, the company was both prestigious and high paying enough that I went ahead with it. In both cases I got exceptional marks, but also took far more than the supposedly "few hours" they said.
b. 15ish
c. 3
d. Systems Design, distributed systems, communication
d. 3
e. Took PTO