It's a job.
It might suit the slow and steady types if you are in the right project/department. If you get to assemble aeroplanes, it might be a good job. However, I wouldn't advise wasting your time stalling your career here if you are a software developer, for example.
Overall a low point in my career and life.
Endless boring, pointless corporate meetings. Endless corporate indoctrination/propaganda. Well below average working conditions (very cramped, noisy, uncomfortable office building). Old-fashioned and American-centric culture. Not suitable for certain career paths.
Applied online and had a Webex interview with the two managers from the team. I was offered a job and had to get a security clearance. This involved a lot of paperwork, questionnaires, and an interview with a psychologist.
Not bad, but since the software test is in pen and paper, you should practice pseudocode and not cheat. Interviews are now in the post-AI era, where companies use it extensively or not at all.
Though it was pre-recorded, there was one behavioral question, one coding question, and one recording of you explaining your solution. The question was impossible, and I later looked it up to see it wasn’t actually solvable.
Applied online and had a Webex interview with the two managers from the team. I was offered a job and had to get a security clearance. This involved a lot of paperwork, questionnaires, and an interview with a psychologist.
Not bad, but since the software test is in pen and paper, you should practice pseudocode and not cheat. Interviews are now in the post-AI era, where companies use it extensively or not at all.
Though it was pre-recorded, there was one behavioral question, one coding question, and one recording of you explaining your solution. The question was impossible, and I later looked it up to see it wasn’t actually solvable.