High salary. Nothing else, really.
Toxic culture. Toxic environment. Toxic coworkers. Incompetent managers.
I would write a whole book to explain how terrible it is to work at Revolut, but I don't want to spend much more of my time on this company.
Get ready to work countless extra hours to try to meet stupid deadlines. There is no clear direction, no clear objectives (they will ask you to do A but expect B instead), no team culture (two-faced people, everyone just working to save their own as.s). There are 3-month evaluation periods (you will get the results from the previous one when the next one is about to start, so get ready to be really stressed). There are internal jokes because of the high rotation of employees, etc., etc., etc.
I'm still sitting here waiting for my manager and team leader to say goodbye. Amazing.
I really don't care anymore about this company, so no.
3-4 stages of technical interviews, questions ranging from dashboard design to observability pipeline design to Kubernetes fundamentals. The final stage was with somebody who was maybe an engineering director of sorts and seemed like they were the d
Interviewed by a recruiter, yes you read that right. Technical questions asked by a recruiter to a software engineer with 10 years of experience, a Computer Science degree, and working in a top big tech company where only 3% manage to get in. I shoul
Applied for a Python Software Engineer role. What followed was one of the most unprofessional interview processes I've experienced. The initial screening invite was completely empty – no job details, no requirements, nothing about what to expect. Sh
3-4 stages of technical interviews, questions ranging from dashboard design to observability pipeline design to Kubernetes fundamentals. The final stage was with somebody who was maybe an engineering director of sorts and seemed like they were the d
Interviewed by a recruiter, yes you read that right. Technical questions asked by a recruiter to a software engineer with 10 years of experience, a Computer Science degree, and working in a top big tech company where only 3% manage to get in. I shoul
Applied for a Python Software Engineer role. What followed was one of the most unprofessional interview processes I've experienced. The initial screening invite was completely empty – no job details, no requirements, nothing about what to expect. Sh