The only good thing about Atlassian is the environment. You can relax the whole day at the office.
Boring. Boring. So boring.
Not interesting projects. Tons of buggy code. You will spend your nights trying to figure out what is wrong with the code.
Most engineers know a few design patterns and think that they know how to make a good design.
And managers? I don't even know how they became managers.
The recruiter reached out to me and scheduled a screening interview through Google Meet. The interview was common: describing the company and position, asking questions about experience and salary expectations, and answering any questions you have.
I went through Atlassian’s coding design interview recently, and the experience was surprisingly poor for a company of this scale. The exercise itself was simple, and I completed the implementation correctly. The interviewer gave me positive feedback
I went through the full Atlassian interview pipeline over about 1.5 months, including: * Karat Live Coding – I passed two rounds. The interviewer changed the problem twice mid-session to make it harder, but I solved all versions successfully. *
The recruiter reached out to me and scheduled a screening interview through Google Meet. The interview was common: describing the company and position, asking questions about experience and salary expectations, and answering any questions you have.
I went through Atlassian’s coding design interview recently, and the experience was surprisingly poor for a company of this scale. The exercise itself was simple, and I completed the implementation correctly. The interviewer gave me positive feedback
I went through the full Atlassian interview pipeline over about 1.5 months, including: * Karat Live Coding – I passed two rounds. The interviewer changed the problem twice mid-session to make it harder, but I solved all versions successfully. *