I'm very new to GitLab, but I'm nothing but impressed so far. Here are some of my pros for working at GitLab:
It's hard to speak about cons since I just started, but the distributed nature of the teams, across time zones, will take some getting used to. I love the idea, though, so it's not much of a con.
Continue with your strong values of openness and transparency.
The screening interview is followed by a take-home PR that asks you to complete a task related to it in the GitLab ecosystem. Following that is a technical interview with an engineer, lasting an hour and a half. During this interview, you will go ov
A GitLab recruiter reached out to me via email asking if I’d be up to discuss a potential opportunity. I agreed to a call, in which the recruiter shared information about the role. The next steps were: * an interview with the manager who was hiring,
I actually liked the interview format, as it was not typical LeetCode. They asked me to review a PR. I passed that round and was set up to meet the team. Everything was good until now. I met the manager and some team members and believe the behavio
The screening interview is followed by a take-home PR that asks you to complete a task related to it in the GitLab ecosystem. Following that is a technical interview with an engineer, lasting an hour and a half. During this interview, you will go ov
A GitLab recruiter reached out to me via email asking if I’d be up to discuss a potential opportunity. I agreed to a call, in which the recruiter shared information about the role. The next steps were: * an interview with the manager who was hiring,
I actually liked the interview format, as it was not typical LeetCode. They asked me to review a PR. I passed that round and was set up to meet the team. Everything was good until now. I met the manager and some team members and believe the behavio