The company feeds you: lunch at least once a month, and healthy-ish snacks and fruit every day. The work is challenging and will keep you on your toes. Hard work is respected and rewarded here.
Lots of opportunity for overtime.
Disney hires very, very slowly. If you apply, expect to wait months to hear back from them. Contractors can advance to full-time employees with benefits, but expect to do at least a contract and a half (well over two years) with them before getting hired on.
The process didn't take too long. I was in the waiting room for about 5 minutes. I was walked into a meeting room and interviewed by one individual only, a QA Team Lead. We spoke for about 15 minutes, and that was the end of it.
It was a super generic interview. The main job requirement was the capability to refrain from eating lead paint chips. They were more concerned with explaining the job requirements and temporary nature than accurately gauging any skills or abilities.
The interview process is pretty standard. It includes: * A recruiter call * A technical interview * A final panel interview (three to four one-hour interviews) Everyone I spoke with was nice. However, some recruiters might ghost you.
The process didn't take too long. I was in the waiting room for about 5 minutes. I was walked into a meeting room and interviewed by one individual only, a QA Team Lead. We spoke for about 15 minutes, and that was the end of it.
It was a super generic interview. The main job requirement was the capability to refrain from eating lead paint chips. They were more concerned with explaining the job requirements and temporary nature than accurately gauging any skills or abilities.
The interview process is pretty standard. It includes: * A recruiter call * A technical interview * A final panel interview (three to four one-hour interviews) Everyone I spoke with was nice. However, some recruiters might ghost you.