J'ai postulé en ligne. Le processus a pris 3 semaines. J'ai passé un entretien chez Gridwise en mars 2023
Entretien
Overall the process took 3+ weeks, so it was long and tedious. I met with a variety of folks from all aspects of the business and was told I would have to do a several hours task as well at some stage. Overall, the interview(s) took a lot of my time and it seemed like they didn't have a good grasp on the type of candidate they wanted to hire. They should look to cut down the hiring length process to be more attractive and competitive and have a good sense of what talents they are looking for instead of unicorn that can do everything. Some of the folks came across a little supercilious during the interview calls.
Questions d'entretien [1]
Question 1
What growth metrics would you use to measure success What does product management mean to you
J'ai postulé en ligne. Le processus a pris 4 semaines. J'ai passé un entretien chez Gridwise en mars 2023
Entretien
I applied online in mid-April and was scheduled for a call with a recruiter for the following week. Standard initial screening call, nothing unusual to report there. Next I was scheduled to meet with the hiring manager for 45 minutes and that went well - we had a good rapport and ending up spending nearly an hour chatting.
After that I was scheduled to meet with their CTO, but it took several weeks to get a single 45 minute call on the calendar. It didn't entirely seem like they had their act together. The 45 minutes with the CTO was pretty open-ended, and he asked me about zero of the topics I was prepped by the hiring manager to discuss. He asked a couple of extremely generic questions - nothing stands out.
Two days after the CTO interview, I received a generic auto-rejection. I walked away with the impression (and another PM interview here indicates the same thing) that the company either didn't know entirely what they were looking for, or was looking for a "perfect" candidate that likely doesn't exist. Frankly it was a relief to be rejected, as they'd initially told me to expect do a long case study if I made it further into the process, and in my experience these are usually "gotcha" exercises where they're either looking to extract free work from the candidate, or give you a business problem they've already solved for and then only want to hear you arrive at the same solution they did.
Overall, a time consuming experience (one month from start to finish, and I didn't make it to the case study stage) that left a sour taste in my mouth. I don't think they actually know what they're looking for, and are trying to socialize the blame for potentially making a bad hire by making candidates perform endless rounds of interviews and exercises.
Questions d'entretien [1]
Question 1
Tell me about a time you made a product decision that turned out to be a mistake, what you learned from it, and how you corrected it.