It's Microsoft and great to put on your CV. Colleagues are friendly and professional. You can learn a lot about working with other people and working in a corporation. Work-life balance is okay.
Salary is low compared to living costs. The work is pretty boring, and engineering processes are ancient. Although they tend to change, they do so very slowly.
Stop selling the brand of working at a great company and really make it a great company.
Pay more attention to employees.
The interview was based on the process described in the official hiring assessment. It consisted of 3-4 rounds: * The first round was a usual coding task. * The others were more holistic.
Microsoft came to the university for a career fair, and I dropped my resume after talking a bit about myself. I received an email a week later asking for an interview on campus. I had the interview one week later, then I got my rejection email one
I applied online and then received feedback that Microsoft would come to my school. They provided a link to choose a time slot, and then I had an on-campus interview. It was 45 minutes long.
The interview was based on the process described in the official hiring assessment. It consisted of 3-4 rounds: * The first round was a usual coding task. * The others were more holistic.
Microsoft came to the university for a career fair, and I dropped my resume after talking a bit about myself. I received an email a week later asking for an interview on campus. I had the interview one week later, then I got my rejection email one
I applied online and then received feedback that Microsoft would come to my school. They provided a link to choose a time slot, and then I had an on-campus interview. It was 45 minutes long.