Good pay and benefits. Good coworkers. The lighting business is dying. The company will not give you the opportunity to advance.
No money is allowed for projects. It is hard to purchase anything from anywhere. There are really tight restrictions on who and where you purchase supplies. Not to mention people who will not do business with you because the company fails to pay in a timely manner.
Sell this business before it becomes dead weight! Oh wait, it already is dead weight. Look somewhere else for a job!
Very basic, not difficult, quite okay, nice and smooth, okayish. Don't worry, it will be okay. Just brush up basics of physics and engineering from the first 2 years, and things will be okay.
The interviews were fairly straightforward, outside of an in-person exam. There was a phone interview, an in-person interview (round-robin style), a mechanical aptitude test related to the field, and a follow-up review/interview (final stage).
It was an AI interview which consisted of general situational questions, such as a time where you were resourceful. It was a normal experience as you would expect, since it was AI.
Very basic, not difficult, quite okay, nice and smooth, okayish. Don't worry, it will be okay. Just brush up basics of physics and engineering from the first 2 years, and things will be okay.
The interviews were fairly straightforward, outside of an in-person exam. There was a phone interview, an in-person interview (round-robin style), a mechanical aptitude test related to the field, and a follow-up review/interview (final stage).
It was an AI interview which consisted of general situational questions, such as a time where you were resourceful. It was a normal experience as you would expect, since it was AI.