You'll never stop learning at Amazon. There are always challenges around the corner, and you'll have to deal with massive-scale architectures.
It can be challenging to manage your time properly, given the amount of priorities to coordinate and context switches.
It's a fast-paced environment.
A recruiter sent me an OA, and even though I didn't attend it yet, she told me I failed. After some research, they noticed they screened my previous OA result. I don't like this lack of a system.
First, there was the recruiter interview to gather some information. This was followed by five "on-site remote" rounds of average difficulty, although some interviewers performed poorly. I was denied and promised feedback, but was ultimately ghoste
Typical Amazon procedure: a recruiter reaches out. This time, instead of just clicking the delete button, I was actually intrigued with the team: their LEO satellite group. I pretty much breezed through the HR interview, and then proceeded to the f
A recruiter sent me an OA, and even though I didn't attend it yet, she told me I failed. After some research, they noticed they screened my previous OA result. I don't like this lack of a system.
First, there was the recruiter interview to gather some information. This was followed by five "on-site remote" rounds of average difficulty, although some interviewers performed poorly. I was denied and promised feedback, but was ultimately ghoste
Typical Amazon procedure: a recruiter reaches out. This time, instead of just clicking the delete button, I was actually intrigued with the team: their LEO satellite group. I pretty much breezed through the HR interview, and then proceeded to the f