People at Tesla are very open and accepting of change. It's one of the best and worst things about it.
If you happen to land in the right fit team for you, it can be the best thing ever because although you work long, unpredictable hours, you'll get to do a lot of what you love.
Also, there are some managers who protect their teams from the surrounding chaos of the company. I wasn't fortunate to have a manager like that, but I knew of some.
Work-life balance is given no consideration; expect to be at work or on call 24/7, even worse when you are good at your job.
Employee turnover rate is high. Most engineers will tell you they don't expect to be at the company in two years' time, even those just starting.
Tesla really fails when it comes to developing its employees. There is no care into what projects individuals want to do and lean towards. Everyone just needs to be carbon copies of good controls engineers, and that's what every manager wants. It also doesn't help that motivation is through fear. Elon is more feared than respected. The drive is to never show up on Elon's radar.
I heard someone put it quite well: "Tesla is a great company to come from, but not a great company to be in." Any job you take after this will feel like a vacation.
Teams are pushed to be homogenous and not heterogeneous, meaning that everyone is meant to be a cog of the same size in the wheel. No thought at all is given to differences between individuals. Things like team diversity or using individuals' strengths to their full capacity are things for other companies that have visions past the next three to six months.
Get to know our employees better, what motivates them, and what they want to do with their lives. Give at least some thought to diversity of skill and approach.
Very relaxed. Some basic technical questions on structures were asked, followed by a few behavioral questions. I interviewed with an engineer and a manager. A total of two rounds were completed.
Recruiters were super nice at the beginning. The process was not easy: * Three phone interviews * An on-site personal interview * A technical test * A 30-minute presentation (where the candidate talked about their work) * Immediately foll
A recruiter emailed me with the job description. We had a phone call chat two days later. During the conversation, they scheduled an interview with a Senior Equipment Engineer for four days after that. The interview included basic questions, a reques
Very relaxed. Some basic technical questions on structures were asked, followed by a few behavioral questions. I interviewed with an engineer and a manager. A total of two rounds were completed.
Recruiters were super nice at the beginning. The process was not easy: * Three phone interviews * An on-site personal interview * A technical test * A 30-minute presentation (where the candidate talked about their work) * Immediately foll
A recruiter emailed me with the job description. We had a phone call chat two days later. During the conversation, they scheduled an interview with a Senior Equipment Engineer for four days after that. The interview included basic questions, a reques