J'ai postulé via un recruteur. Le processus a pris 3 jours. J'ai passé un entretien chez Meraki (San Francisco, CA) en sept. 2012
Entretien
Contacted by a new Recruiter via linkedin. She asked for my resume even though she was trying to recruit me. We scheduled a time to talk and she talked my ear off. I thought recruiters are supposed to let the candidates do the talking. She kept me on the phone for an entire hour from all her talking. She did ask me basic questions and then she'd ask the same question 2-3 more times. Either she didn't know what she was doing or she was doing that on purpose to see if I was lying, which I don't appreciate. The first impression was not a good one, she didn't do anything to represent meraki in the best light and make me want to leave my job of 4 years to go to meraki. The recruiter then determined she wanted me to be phone screened by a Manager so I spoke to one of the sales managers. In 5 minutes, he determined I didn't work in channel sales and that I don't have salesforce experience or demo experience because my company uses an inside crm and we have SE's who do all the demos. In 5 min he determined I was not a fit, which she couldn't determine in an hour of talking to me. The sales manager even apologized to me for the recruiter saying she's new and most of the sales team is new and still have a lot to learn. It's upsetting to have to deal with these kinds of recruiters because it wastes time. I didn't have a good impression of meraki and wouldn't interview here again.
J'ai passé un entretien chez Meraki (Londres, Angleterre)
Entretien
Got a first call from an HR representative after my submission on Linkedin. Then my second call was with a manager that asked me about my previous experiences. Unfortunately there was no follow up on that.
efficient, effective, fair -- the recruiters prepped you accordingly and really want you to succeed. the managers are knowledgable and eager to answer your questions. I was impressed with Cisco Meraki compared to other large organizations.
J'ai postulé via un recruteur. Le processus a pris 2 semaines. J'ai passé un entretien chez Meraki en janv. 2019
Entretien
Overall the process was pleasant and fair.
A recruiter from Meraki reached out via LinkedIn. We had a 30 minute initial phone screen. Pretty standard tell me about yourself questions.
A day later I was asked to do a 30 minute phone interview with a sales manager.
During the sales manager interview, a team lead ran the call instead. A green flag that there is room to grow here. They asked pretty standard questions as well. They are really big on culture or at least they say they are. I was told to be ready to talk about the products during this interview, but they never asked. Be ready to talk about your sales experience and current quota.
They move fast - a day later I was asked to come in for a 2-hour four part interview.
By now, the recruiter has sent you an email containing literally hours of videos and links about the company to research before the interview. Nice that they set you up for success, but it’s a lot of information to digest (especially how quickly they move through interviews). Know the 6 products, their competitors, and their value prop. Also, know you’re own sales numbers - very specific. You can bring notes to the interview.
They show you around the office - cool space. Not really a west loop location like they advertise. Kind of hard to get to actually.
The 4 interviews aren’t bad if you prep for it. Be ready to talk about everything in detail. You can’t fake the interview - especially the product knowledge.
I have a neutral outlook because I was told I would know right away, but it took them a week to reach out and tell me they’re going in another direction. I was told my underwhelming theme was lack of passion for, “why Meraki”. I was told I nailed everything else so that was interesting feedback.
They have a very solid product line. But, it seems like a shove it down your throat culture. It’s an 8-5. No work from home. Although, it does seem like they have solid training and upward mobility if you work for it.