My interview process with BlueCargo was, in a word, chaotic. From start to finish, it was clear that neither the company nor the third-party recruiter (Seller's Hub) had a solid grasp on what they were looking for—or how to run a structured hiring process.
Recruiter Experience: Disorganized and Unreliable
The third-party recruiter I worked with was extremely unorganized. My initial point of contact left the company after my first phone screen, yet no one bothered to inform me. Instead, I was left dealing with recruiters who insisted on texting me constantly for updates but failed to provide me with any meaningful information when I needed it. Any time I was waiting on next steps, I had to be the one following up.
An Ever-Changing Process
BlueCargo initially outlined a three-step process:
1. A conversation with the SVP
2. A Case Study presentation with the Product team
3. A final round with the Co-Founders
However, the process quickly spiraled into an unpredictable maze. After my Case Study presentation, I was suddenly asked to prepare an entirely new deck with a different prompt—something that was never mentioned in the original process. Assuming I had cleared that hurdle, I expected to move on to the co-founders. Instead, I was sent back to the SVP of Sales for yet another conversation.
That round also seemed to go well—so well that the SVP explicitly told me the next step would be meeting the co-founders. And then? Radio silence. No updates, no feedback, nothing from the recruiter.
A Disorganized Company, Not Just a Bad Interview
Beyond my experience, I’ve since spoken with former colleagues who have worked at BlueCargo, and their feedback confirms what I suspected: this level of dysfunction isn’t limited to hiring—it’s the company culture.
Final Verdict: A Complete Waste of Time
Between Seller’s Hub and BlueCargo, I lost valuable time engaging in an unstructured, frustrating, and ultimately fruitless process. If you value your time and a well-organized company, stay far away from BlueCargo.