Work-life balance is emphasized, but you have to work at it. There's a flex-work culture.
The environment can set you up to grow your skill level quite a lot, but you also have to make sure to fight for the projects that will let you do that and get the right managers and support.
A lot of emphasis on risk and process can bog down the work. Lots of things get cancelled too often (mostly the "cool" projects), which can be a downer.
Coding Assessment: Online test with DSA and basic problem-solving questions. Two Technical Rounds: Round 1: DSA + SQL questions Round 2: Software fundamentals (OOPS, OS, DBMS, networking, etc.) HR Round: Behavioral questions, background, salary,
The interview was in-person, including the intro. We moved ahead with coding questions and QA-related theoretical and practical questions. I was asked to write some piece of code too. Overall, it was a good experience.
Basic Oops concepts, some medium-level DSA, and in-depth questions on projects and technical electives mentioned in the resume were asked. I would rank the difficulty level somewhere between easy to medium.
Coding Assessment: Online test with DSA and basic problem-solving questions. Two Technical Rounds: Round 1: DSA + SQL questions Round 2: Software fundamentals (OOPS, OS, DBMS, networking, etc.) HR Round: Behavioral questions, background, salary,
The interview was in-person, including the intro. We moved ahead with coding questions and QA-related theoretical and practical questions. I was asked to write some piece of code too. Overall, it was a good experience.
Basic Oops concepts, some medium-level DSA, and in-depth questions on projects and technical electives mentioned in the resume were asked. I would rank the difficulty level somewhere between easy to medium.