The product is amazing, and teammates are super smart. There's a good balance of very senior and experienced folks who I can learn from, as well as younger, bright folks. There are good opportunities to learn and work on AI technologies. The company has a culture to push hard, and one is never limited in the scope of work they can get. The business is growing very fast with top customer brands.
A bit too much consensus culture. Need more attention on non R&D and Business areas. Currently, there are no leaders outside of those teams, and as can be seen from other reviews, it was fine when it was a small team and everyone pitched in and communication was easy. There is a very clear need for internal Comms.
Invest more in support functions.
First, it asks a couple of questions about your background, such as something you worked on that excited you. Then, it moves on to DSA questions, potentially two if there's time. Finally, it asks system design questions if there is time.
The interview process at Glean included an initial technical screening and then a final onsite round. The first round interview was not too difficult, but it was not the traditional LeetCode-style interview.
Made it to the final round, which consists of a 2-hour assessment and 2 live technical interviews. The 2-hour assessment is ridiculously long, and I guess they legitimately expect people to finish all of it. One technical interview touched upon an
First, it asks a couple of questions about your background, such as something you worked on that excited you. Then, it moves on to DSA questions, potentially two if there's time. Finally, it asks system design questions if there is time.
The interview process at Glean included an initial technical screening and then a final onsite round. The first round interview was not too difficult, but it was not the traditional LeetCode-style interview.
Made it to the final round, which consists of a 2-hour assessment and 2 live technical interviews. The 2-hour assessment is ridiculously long, and I guess they legitimately expect people to finish all of it. One technical interview touched upon an