Good work-life balance, good pay, and good benefits.
This is a good job if you don't care about development or how bad upper management is.
They are not toxic. The people here are very nice and fun. Management is unqualified to lead; that is the only issue.
Communication between teams is worse than you can think. Stuff will change that affects your work, and you aren't given as little as an E-mail update about it. When teams do communicate, it's plain and simple bad.
This is all on upper management (from the CEO and down) and middle management. They are all either unqualified for their positions or have stopped caring. No one cares about communicating at all with non-engineering roles either, so it's a mystery of changes that affect the rest of the company, but no one knows when, how, or why. If you speak up about it, your complaints will go nowhere.
Until the communication issues are fixed, I don't understand how the company will succeed.
Hire new senior management, including a CEO.
Don't go for Wish China! Some HRs were really rude and vindictive, seeming to have discrimination towards applicants. That's really no good, only damaging the company's image. It's not about ability, but about morality and quality.
A technical phone interview. You need to code meanwhile, with only one code question. First, introduce yourself (prefer to talk about your programming experiences) and then begin coding. After coding, you can ask some questions about the company.
I gave them an explicit timeline early on in the interview process. After five rounds and passing the final round, they informed me they wanted to wait two-plus weeks to interview other candidates, and then finally said they would have information th
Don't go for Wish China! Some HRs were really rude and vindictive, seeming to have discrimination towards applicants. That's really no good, only damaging the company's image. It's not about ability, but about morality and quality.
A technical phone interview. You need to code meanwhile, with only one code question. First, introduce yourself (prefer to talk about your programming experiences) and then begin coding. After coding, you can ask some questions about the company.
I gave them an explicit timeline early on in the interview process. After five rounds and passing the final round, they informed me they wanted to wait two-plus weeks to interview other candidates, and then finally said they would have information th