A big company has lots of eyes on it, so the chances of bad things happening, I feel like, are smaller (but this, I guess, can be a con too).
Lots of opportunity for both learning and mobility.
It depends on your team manager how happy you will be here. (I got a good one myself). You don't have much say or pull unless you are higher up at the firm.
I attended an interview at JP Morgan for the post of Software Engineer II .NET. I cleared all the technical rounds and attended the behavioral round with the executive director as well. I went through all the interview rounds, including the final HR
I had three rounds: two technical and one with the hiring manager. The first one was about code review and how to improve the code. The second was like LeetCode, but in person and on a whiteboard. The final one was with the hiring manager, about p
A three-step process: First, a phone call with a recruiter, who sent me a HackerRank code assignment. After completing the assignment, I was invited to a virtual onsite day with three rounds of interviews: coding, system design, and behavioral. Ever
I attended an interview at JP Morgan for the post of Software Engineer II .NET. I cleared all the technical rounds and attended the behavioral round with the executive director as well. I went through all the interview rounds, including the final HR
I had three rounds: two technical and one with the hiring manager. The first one was about code review and how to improve the code. The second was like LeetCode, but in person and on a whiteboard. The final one was with the hiring manager, about p
A three-step process: First, a phone call with a recruiter, who sent me a HackerRank code assignment. After completing the assignment, I was invited to a virtual onsite day with three rounds of interviews: coding, system design, and behavioral. Ever