Pay and benefits were great. Free meals, but no cafeteria. They want you to work at your desk so you'll work longer hours.
And so you'll stay in your little cubbyhole where you belong and not interact with anybody who "doesn't need to know" (a key buzzword at this paranoid firm).
The manager was horrendously insecure and micromanaged everything in a field he had no business or experience to justify doing so. HR and the manager's boss didn't seem to care that he was doing this, even after informing them he bought an expensive board without consulting his subordinates. It was effectively useless for what he wanted to do with it, something that could have been avoided if this guy had put his ego aside and asked the people working for him with more experience and knowledge.
The company has a highly secretive culture. At least two people were hired into our group without my knowledge. Granted, I wasn't a manager myself, but I'm generally accustomed to being permitted to interview candidates I'm going to work with and at least make a recommendation.
You're also not allowed to talk to anyone because of this whole "need to know" BS that permeates the whole place. If you're coming from the tech sector and are used to being allowed to talk to people in other groups to get an idea of what it is they want, forget about doing that here.
The insecure micromanager is your gatekeeper here. He will dictate the specifications and how he wants you to build your design. He will not care about your feedback or warnings about his architecture because his ego is too big. Then, two weeks after you make your delivery and move on to the next project, the micromanager will tell you that the requirements weren't defined right and you need to go back to the old project and fix it so the internal customers will be happy. This is something that clearly could be avoided by just letting us interact directly with the internal customers rather than carry this whole "need to know" concept to the paranoid extreme that exists at Citadel.
I'll say two more things that sum up the company culture here. About six months through my one-year stint at this place, there was a company-wide meeting where a friend of CEO Ken Griffin gave a talk about something. Following the presentation, there was a reception afterward. It dawned on me that I knew nobody there beyond my manager and colleagues at this reception. And if you held a gun to my head today and told me to name more than six or seven people who work for Citadel (never mind titles or departments or anything), I'd end up with a hole in my head.
Just stay away. This place is just not worth the trouble or the pay, or dealing with the micromanager's ego.
Get the insecure micro-manager out of the field he's managing and keep him in the field where he belongs. This means the field you hired him to work in, not this new field he's micro-managing.
As you'd expect for a hedge fund, there were detailed, multi-step interviews with 4 technical rounds via Zoom, then in person. Interviews were all done by the team that they were hiring into. The last step was with a senior business user.
First round technical interview via Zoom: * Introduction of my current and previous work. * They introduced the job duties. * Technical questions on basic hardware computation. The process lasted around one hour.
The process was set up entirely on Zoom during this hard time. Interviewers are from Hong Kong, Chicago, and Sydney. They are very friendly, so don't worry if you can't answer all the questions completely.
As you'd expect for a hedge fund, there were detailed, multi-step interviews with 4 technical rounds via Zoom, then in person. Interviews were all done by the team that they were hiring into. The last step was with a senior business user.
First round technical interview via Zoom: * Introduction of my current and previous work. * They introduced the job duties. * Technical questions on basic hardware computation. The process lasted around one hour.
The process was set up entirely on Zoom during this hard time. Interviewers are from Hong Kong, Chicago, and Sydney. They are very friendly, so don't worry if you can't answer all the questions completely.