Step 1 was a standard online application form.
Step 2 was a mostly technical, hour-long phone interview with some unexpected behavioral questions as well. This was mostly standard fare.
Step 3 was an interview at Bloomberg's office. I was kept waiting for at least 20 minutes in the lobby before an interviewer came to our group. We were given a tour of the office and then had lunch with the engineers who would then be interviewing us. I was then taken to the actual interview by two of them. I was asked behavioral questions first and then an extended technical question. The engineers were polite and supportive, even when I did not know the answers. Afterwards, I was taken back to the lobby and, after more waiting, was shown the way out along with some other candidates by one of the interviewers. They told me the next step would be another interview if successful.
I was sent a generic rejection email after following up two weeks later. Although I had arranged a call for feedback, I did not receive any calls.
Given a book, write a program that outputs a list of words and the pages they appear on.
The following metrics were computed from 39 interview experiences for the Bloomberg LP Software Developer role in London, United Kingdom.
Bloomberg LP's interview process for their Software Developer roles in London, the United Kingdom is very selective, failing most engineers who go through it.
Candidates reported having very good feelings for Bloomberg LP's Software Developer interview process in London, United Kingdom.