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      Entretien pour Test Automation Developer

      25 févr. 2015
      Candidat à l'entretien anonyme
      Offre refusée
      Expérience négative
      Entretien facile

      Candidature

      J'ai postulé en ligne. J'ai passé un entretien chez Case IQ

      Entretien

      I applied online and was immediately contacted by the HR representative who wanted to setup an interview with the hiring manager. The interview with the hiring manager went very well -- he knew his stuff and had a decisive vision of what he wanted from the person he was going to hire. I answered a few QA and coding related questions and chatted with him for a bit before the meeting ended. I was given a DISC personality test to fill out at home and waited for a follow up interview. A follow-up interview was setup a week later with the board members of the company -- and this is where things got weird. The board members seemed to be saying "we don't think we need a test automation developer, but the QA manager says he needs one." The whole meeting seemed to be aimed at making me defend a job that I hadn't even been hired for yet. Oh and to top it off the dreaded DISC personality test was brought up and I was made to defend my results in front of the board members. The atmosphere created by the board members was very negative and antagonistic. And to top it off, they came back with a job offer with a salary that was $10k less than what other companies in market are paying for the same role.

      Questions d'entretien [1]

      Question 1

      How would you test a webpage.
      Répondre à cette question
      6
      avatar
      Réponse de Case IQ
      11y
      As one of the Partners who participated in the interview, I'm sorry you've interpreted the discussion as 'antagonistic'. We believe strongly that great QA helps us deliver great software and have hired one of Ottawa's best QA Managers to lead our team. The questions were intended to help us understand if you're pragmatic or dogmatic in your approach to QA. We certainly are not looking to have candidates convince us of the necessity for testing, but rather to have a conversation that helps us understand if we see the world the same way. The Caliper discussion was not intended to make you feel defensive. We don't take the results as absolute truth and prefer to have an open conversation with candidates to understand how they interpret the results. We were impressed with your experience and made an offer hoping you would join our team. I'm sorry things didn't work out and wish you the best.