Trainings offered are pretty good. It depends on your luck as well. If you get a good project, then it's a peaceful and proactive journey.
You will not get a chance to develop your skills. You'll be just a pawn with resource management. You will be pulled in and out of projects based on their need. You will be put in projects that are not your primary skills if they can't find a resource on time. The hierarchy is too vast and there's no direct connection with your managers.
It was a three-round process with 1. First round: Manager (30-45 mins) * Background checkup Second round: Technical (1 hr to 1.15 hr) * DSA question * Question from CV * Question from Academics * Specialization Third round: Confirmation round (30
Had 3 rounds of interviews. First, a recruiter round. Second, a Hiring Manager round. Third, a coding challenge. Then, I dropped out. The interview process was too lengthy, scheduled with lots of gaps. Interviewers were cool enough.
The first round was non-elimination behavioral; they asked simple questions. Then it was a math/puzzles round where they gave three puzzles. You were supposed to find the path within the given timeframe and answer some quick-fire math questions wher
It was a three-round process with 1. First round: Manager (30-45 mins) * Background checkup Second round: Technical (1 hr to 1.15 hr) * DSA question * Question from CV * Question from Academics * Specialization Third round: Confirmation round (30
Had 3 rounds of interviews. First, a recruiter round. Second, a Hiring Manager round. Third, a coding challenge. Then, I dropped out. The interview process was too lengthy, scheduled with lots of gaps. Interviewers were cool enough.
The first round was non-elimination behavioral; they asked simple questions. Then it was a math/puzzles round where they gave three puzzles. You were supposed to find the path within the given timeframe and answer some quick-fire math questions wher