Being a software development engineer, Microsoft is a great place to be.
There are so many orgs and teams working on drastically different things. If you get bored at one team, you have options to switch teams within the company. There's no limit for how many times you can switch teams.
Even though the company is huge, I feel the org and teams are tightly connected. You come across familiar faces in the hallway multiple times a day; people nod their head or smile at you even though they may not know your name.
Benefits and pay may not be the best, but it's great given how many hours you put in. The 401k with 50% match (up to $9,250 in 2018), ESPP, HSA, etc. are awesome and serve as a great vehicle for preparing for retirement (early). If you are lucky enough, you can take the shuttle/Connector to go to work without having to drive.
Compared to my previous employers, Microsoft is the best, and I feel privileged every day I work in the company.
Pay can be more in line with competitors; a few engineers I know voted with their feet.
Sometimes, it takes a little effort to understand project requirements. It's not always clear who to ask and where to go. This may be the nature of those projects.
The performance review can be more transparent.
I was asked to write a web server (choice of language) that can serve very limited requests, including byte-range. I also had to write testing code for it. * 1 problem-solving round (coding) * 4-5 rounds of on-site interviews Hiring process of
I was referred by a friend working there. I completed one round of phone screen in late December. The following week, I was asked to pick a date for the on-site interview.
It was a virtual interview for a software developer role. I was shocked to see the questions asked, the reason being they were Google's interview questions. For someone with 6+ years of experience who doesn't have LeetCode practice, asking such type
I was asked to write a web server (choice of language) that can serve very limited requests, including byte-range. I also had to write testing code for it. * 1 problem-solving round (coding) * 4-5 rounds of on-site interviews Hiring process of
I was referred by a friend working there. I completed one round of phone screen in late December. The following week, I was asked to pick a date for the on-site interview.
It was a virtual interview for a software developer role. I was shocked to see the questions asked, the reason being they were Google's interview questions. For someone with 6+ years of experience who doesn't have LeetCode practice, asking such type