I had a unique interview process as I began my conversation with Dynatrace two days before the state of Michigan began implementing COVID-related health safety measures. My initial conversation, a phone interview, was very typical; it was mostly information gathering from both parties.
During this phone interview, I was told that hiring would be paused in favor of waiting for in-person interviews to be conducted safely. However, within 3 business days, the technical recruiter was able to schedule a video interview, which was conducted 6 days after my initial phone conversation.
The video interview was conducted with 2 developers who were team leads and focused mostly on my technical skills and experience. After greetings and introductions, I asked to talk about the technical and non-technical tasks I had performed at my current job. After giving my spiel, I was able to ask questions directly to the team. A notable takeaway from the interviewers' answers was that Dynatrace was hiring for competency and enthusiasm, not necessarily for expertise.
After my video interview, it was only one business day until the tech recruiter informed me that the team was interested in giving me a take-home project. However, we would pause the process until after it was safe to meet in-person (in the Detroit office). The process stalled, understandably so, given this was amidst the April quarantine.
Roughly one month after my video interview, the technical recruiter reached out to let me know that Dynatrace was still interested in me as a candidate, but that the interview process was still on-hold.
Roughly two full months after my video interview, the technical recruiter called me directly to let me know that the company was going to move forward with hiring and onboarding employees completely remotely. I was given requirements for a take-home project. The tech recruiter asked me for an estimate of how long I thought it would take to complete the project, which he suggested should take me 8 hours. I committed to the project and spent roughly 11 hours on it.
My final interview, conducted over video, was to demo the project to 4 team leads and 1 director. Their questions on my code, the intent of my code, and my approach were tough but fair. Immediately after my demo, the team took time to give me feedback. This instant feedback loop gave me a solid perception of how I performed with my demo. I feel that comfort with speaking to a group, a high level of organization, attention to detail, and a bit of insightfulness (not just completing the minimum requirements) were keys to my success.
After the demo, I spent 30 minutes interviewing with 2 directors. The tech recruiter committed to notifying me if I would receive an offer within 3 business days, and delivered in 2 days.
Misc. reflections:
Why did you not reset the margin and padding on the body of your front-end application?
The following metrics were computed from 2 interview experiences for the Dynatrace Software Engineer role in Detroit, Michigan.
Dynatrace's interview process for their Software Engineer roles in Detroit, Michigan is incredibly easy as the vast majority of engineers get an offer after going through it.
Candidates reported having very good feelings for Dynatrace's Software Engineer interview process in Detroit, Michigan.