Pros were in the money.
The only con was that there was no definite job. The contract was up to 3 years but there was no clue if it would last the entire time. Also, it was affiliated with/under IBM, and we were last to know of issues or projects, and that was a sour practice. So it can depend on which section you work under.
This was in person. Three engineers were asking questions about your history.
Very easygoing, kind of informal, but that depends on who is interviewing you. The guy I had was from a third-party hiring company that AT&T uses, and he was super talkative. My interview went overtime by 30 minutes because he was telling me about hi
Took OA and passed screening. Moving on to the technical interview. Any advice on what to study up on? I've heard OOP principles and LeetCode easy are on there. So far, the interview process has been really smooth and professional.
This was in person. Three engineers were asking questions about your history.
Very easygoing, kind of informal, but that depends on who is interviewing you. The guy I had was from a third-party hiring company that AT&T uses, and he was super talkative. My interview went overtime by 30 minutes because he was telling me about hi
Took OA and passed screening. Moving on to the technical interview. Any advice on what to study up on? I've heard OOP principles and LeetCode easy are on there. So far, the interview process has been really smooth and professional.