After some time, if you stay in the same project, it could be boring. It could be non-challenging (depending on the project and your experience). You could get yourself stuck in the same project for years (but if that's okay for you and it's a good project, it's not a con; you can be comfortable that way).
Try to get more interesting challenges for the developers.
Work on challenging career paths with growth possibilities.
It started through LinkedIn. A year ago, I had the interview through a study buddy who referred me. The interview was moderately long. I only participated in one interview, as in the meantime I was accepted for another job to start.
Too easy for freshers. Basic general knowledge and common sense are required. One with little technical knowledge can also pass the interview; interviews are not that serious. One of the places freshers can easily get into.
In a combined interview round, they asked both technical and HR questions. I discussed programming concepts, problem-solving, my projects, and also answered questions about my goals, strengths, and teamwork skills.
It started through LinkedIn. A year ago, I had the interview through a study buddy who referred me. The interview was moderately long. I only participated in one interview, as in the meantime I was accepted for another job to start.
Too easy for freshers. Basic general knowledge and common sense are required. One with little technical knowledge can also pass the interview; interviews are not that serious. One of the places freshers can easily get into.
In a combined interview round, they asked both technical and HR questions. I discussed programming concepts, problem-solving, my projects, and also answered questions about my goals, strengths, and teamwork skills.