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      Recherches associées: Avis sur Angi | Offres d’emploi chez Angi | Salaires chez Angi | Avantages sociaux chez Angi
      Entretiens chez AngiEntretiens d’embauche pour Senior Manager, Strategic Partnerships chez AngiEntretien chez Angi


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      Entretien pour Senior Manager, Strategic Partnerships

      1 juill. 2026
      Candidat à l'entretien anonyme
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      Expérience négative
      Entretien difficile

      Candidature

      J'ai passé un entretien chez Angi

      Entretien

      This was one of the most disorganized and disrespectful interview processes I've experienced in nearly 25 years of corporate leadership. The process lasted nearly eight weeks and required a significant investment of time, including multiple recruiter conversations, an interview with senior leadership, review of a robust case-study data set, development of a 15-slide strategic presentation, a formal panel presentation, a hiring manager interview, and multiple follow-up discussions. I initially withdrew because the compensation did not align with the scope of the role. I was later contacted by the recruiter and told, in writing, that approval had been obtained for a higher compensation range. That was the only reason I agreed to re-enter the process. From there, the process steadily deteriorated. The recruiter handling my process went out of office during preparation for my presentation, resulting in a poor handoff and unanswered questions regarding logistics. Less than 24 hours before presenting, a different recruiter informed me that the interview length was being shortened and key presentation logistics were changing after I had already invested substantial time preparing. The interview process itself made little sense. I interviewed with senior leadership, completed a substantial case study, and delivered a formal panel presentation before having my first meaningful conversation with the hiring manager. That is backwards. The biggest issue, however, was compensation. After nearly eight weeks of interviews and completing the most demanding portions of the process, I was informed that the maximum salary for the role was actually below the minimum of the compensation range that had been communicated to me in writing when I agreed to return. Rather than acknowledging that discrepancy, the conversation shifted toward what level of compensation I would be willing to accept, despite the fact that compensation had supposedly already been resolved before I re-entered the process. Immediately following my hiring manager interview, discussions centered around moving me forward and meeting another member of the team. Once I questioned the compensation discrepancy, the process shifted to additional delays while the company continued interviewing other candidates. Communication throughout the process was equally disappointing. I was repeatedly given timelines for updates that were missed. After receiving no response from either recruiter, I ultimately had to contact the hiring manager directly just to obtain a status update on my candidacy. That should never be necessary. Even after that, I continued receiving assurances that I remained a strong finalist, that the team was impressed with my background, and that I was still under consideration before ultimately receiving a rejection. I have the complete email trail documenting every step of this process. My issue is not that I wasn't selected. Companies should hire the candidate they believe is the best fit. My issue is that this process demonstrated a lack of internal alignment, accountability, communication, and respect for a candidate's time. Asking candidates to invest dozens of hours in unpaid interview work while fundamental issues such as compensation remain unresolved is unacceptable. Advice to Management Fix the process before asking candidates to invest this level of time. Align compensation internally before recruiting candidates back into the process. Involve the hiring manager much earlier. Stop requiring extensive unpaid work before confirming that both sides are aligned. Most importantly, treat candidates' time with the same level of professionalism and respect that you expect from them.