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      AdsGency AI

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      Entretien pour Software Engineer

      19 mai 2026
      Candidat à l'entretien anonyme
      Aucune offre
      Expérience négative
      Entretien moyen

      Candidature

      J'ai passé un entretien chez AdsGency AI

      Entretien

      This is the standard, modern gauntlet for mid-to-senior software engineering roles. The recruiter lays out the terms in the intro call, and if you agree to the marathon, you enter the pipeline. Here is an expanded, comprehensive breakdown of what that full end-to-end interview loop looks like, including the hidden rounds and what they are actually testing for. Phase 1: The Gatekeepers 1. Recruiter Intro Call (Mutual Alignment) This is exactly what you described. It’s a vibe check and a contract negotiation before the technical work begins. What happens: The recruiter explains the company culture, the team's mission, and the mandatory interview loop. What they are evaluating: Red flags, communication skills, timeline, and salary expectations. They want to ensure you won't drop out halfway through the process and that your compensation expectations align with their budget. The "Acceptance": You agree to the gauntlet (DSA, System Design, etc.) and they move you to the next phase. 2. The Technical Screen (Code / Async) Before committing the time of their senior engineers for a full loop, companies usually insert a filter. What happens: A 45–60 minute live coding session with an engineer, or an automated HackerRank/Coderpad test. What they are evaluating: Can you actually write working code? This is usually a medium-level algorithmic problem or a practical string/array manipulation task. Phase 2: The Core Loop (The "Onsite") This is the gauntlet you agreed to. It is usually broken into 3 to 5 separate rounds, back-to-back or spread over a few days. 3. Data Structures & Algorithms (DSA) What happens: 45–60 minutes. You are given 1-2 LeetCode-style problems (usually Medium to Hard). What they are evaluating: Your baseline problem-solving speed, understanding of memory/time complexity (Big O notation), and ability to translate logic into clean syntax under pressure. Keys to pass: Thinking out loud, proactively identifying edge cases, and not silently staring at the board. 4. System Design (Architecture) What happens: 60 minutes. A broad, open-ended prompt like "Design a distributed job scheduler" or "Design a hybrid search system." What they are evaluating: Your ability to scale systems. They want to see you navigate load balancing, message queues, database sharding, caching strategies, and API design. Keys to pass: Managing tradeoffs. You need to explicitly discuss why you chose a specific database or messaging pattern (e.g., latency vs. throughput, consistency vs. availability) and how the system handles node failures or network partitions. 5. Debugging & Troubleshooting (or "Craftsmanship") What happens: 45–60 minutes. You are dropped into a foreign, messy codebase with a known bug (e.g., a race condition, a memory leak, or a failing integration test) and asked to fix it. What they are evaluating: How quickly you can read and understand code you didn't write. Do you use logging, debugging tools, and tests effectively? Keys to pass: Systematic isolation. They want to see you write a failing test first to isolate the issue, rather than just randomly changing variables until it works. 6. Domain Deep Dive (The "Experience" Round) What happens: 45–60 minutes. A deep, highly technical conversation about a past project you've worked on, or a deep dive into the specific tech stack of the role (e.g., ML ops pipelines, distributed systems patterns, specific frameworks). What they are evaluating: Did you actually build the systems on your resume, or were you just in the room? They will drill down into the absolute lowest-level details of a problem you claim to have solved. Phase 3: The Human Element 7. Behavioral & Cultural Fit What happens: 45–60 minutes. The classic "Tell me about a time..." questions. What they are evaluating: Emotional intelligence, conflict resolution, and cross-functional collaboration. How do you handle a product manager who wants an impossible feature? What happens when you take down production? Keys to pass: The STAR method (Situation, Task, Action, Result). Focus heavily on the Action and Result, and take ownership of your failures. 8. Hiring Manager Sync (The "Sell" Round) What happens: 30–45 minutes. Sometimes combined with the behavioral round. What they are evaluating: Team dynamics. The manager is asking themselves, "Do I want to manage this person every day?" This is also your chance to interview them about the roadmap, engineering culture, and on-call expectations.

      Questions d'entretien [1]

      Question 1

      design a system and show how you think work onsite
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