Almost no obstacles to learning whatever you want. Some good and smart people.
Data management is way too messy. Politics from top to bottom. Blame games everywhere. In many teams, there is little respect for industrial best practices, but abundant careless assumptions, which results in wasted end products more often than not.
Most scarily, people who make decisions tend to have little in-depth understanding in the areas they manage, but they sincerely believe they do and talk down to others like kings.
After application, you will receive a HackerRank OA to complete in an hour. After completing the OA, you will receive an invite to a first-round technical round with a member of the team.
You get a technical OA, which I'm guessing is automatic. This is followed by interview rounds, leading to a fly-out to Chicago for an in-person interview, presumably whiteboard style. However, I didn't make it to the in-person stage.
45 minutes includes a self-introduction and three HackerRank questions: two standard ones and one LRU. HackerRank questions are usually long and need some time to understand, unlike straightforward LeetCode-style problems.
After application, you will receive a HackerRank OA to complete in an hour. After completing the OA, you will receive an invite to a first-round technical round with a member of the team.
You get a technical OA, which I'm guessing is automatic. This is followed by interview rounds, leading to a fly-out to Chicago for an in-person interview, presumably whiteboard style. However, I didn't make it to the in-person stage.
45 minutes includes a self-introduction and three HackerRank questions: two standard ones and one LRU. HackerRank questions are usually long and need some time to understand, unlike straightforward LeetCode-style problems.