Very good hours. Nice and helpful team members. My team members are intense during the working hours, but they all keep an 8-hour working schedule. The culture is very nice and welcoming.
Everyone is very willing to help. Great transparency. Flat structure.
Mike Bloomberg came to talk to all the interns. You feel that they are really encouraging new, innovative ideas, being bold, and asking questions.
A lot of very fun intern events (in fact, too many that I sometimes don't have enough time to work XD).
Not hard to get a return offer. I'm not sure why some interns said it's hard, but at least it's not hard for developer interns.
The summer picnic is really AWESOME and a lot of fun. Very good hourly wage for interns too.
If you don't like New York, the location might be a con. It's also not as geeky as Google or other big tech firms. But everyone is very nice and hardworking. And everyone can easily fit in since people are very diverse there. No free lunch, but there's free dinner if you stay late.
Offering free lunch.
I had an initial phone interview and then an on-site interview. The phone interview featured standard questions about C and C++, with some string parsing. The on-site interview consisted of four rounds: * Two rounds with engineers * One round with m
Applied online through the university's career portal. I had an initial 45-minute phone interview which included pretty basic syntax-based and algorithm questions. No coding was involved in this interview. Then, I went to New York 10 days after my
I saw the posting on my college career services website and applied on Bloomberg's website. I was contacted about a month later and had a 45-minute phone interview. The interview included two technical questions about data structures: * The first
I had an initial phone interview and then an on-site interview. The phone interview featured standard questions about C and C++, with some string parsing. The on-site interview consisted of four rounds: * Two rounds with engineers * One round with m
Applied online through the university's career portal. I had an initial 45-minute phone interview which included pretty basic syntax-based and algorithm questions. No coding was involved in this interview. Then, I went to New York 10 days after my
I saw the posting on my college career services website and applied on Bloomberg's website. I was contacted about a month later and had a 45-minute phone interview. The interview included two technical questions about data structures: * The first