J'ai postulé via une autre source. Le processus a pris 5 semaines. J'ai passé un entretien chez Newfront (San Francisco, CA) en juin 2019
Entretien
The interview process was pretty straight forward. I had an initial call with the VP of Engineering. This involved getting to learn about Newfront as well as the position I was applying for.
The second call was a technical interview with one of the Software Engineers at the company. This consisted mostly of a coding problem and maybe one or two behavioral questions. Afterwards it was opened up for me to answer any questions I wished about the engineering at Newfront.
The last step was to come on-site. Up until this point, the interview process had been pretty standard from what I'd seen at other companies. Newfront is different, however, in that you participate in a project-based interview.
This involves sitting down in front of a computer and given a feature to implement on the Newfront website. I preferred this as it really played to my strengths.
When I first arrived, I was taken into a conference room with two of the engineers where I was given a slide -deck overview of Newfront and the product they are creating. This was cool as it eased me into the day. Afterwards, you're given a full stack problem that involved implementing features on both the front and back end.
The time frame for this was approximately 6 hours or so (along with an hour for lunch.)
Afterwards, you spend an hour in a conference room with the CTO and a few engineers and talk through the project. This is perhaps the most nerve wracking aspect of the interview as you are asked questions about scaling, further optimization, and pros/cons of your solution. I think at this point they're trying to understand how much you know and how much you don't. Understandable and expected. The tail end of this was a 1:1 with the CTO where you got to overview the day and ask any remaining questions.
I really enjoyed this interview. It felt meaningful. You got to work on a real-world project and talk through the pros/cons of it with the engineers you'd been chatting/working with during the day.
Lunch was great as well. It gave me a chance to get to know a number of the people I might potentially be working with in the future. Same with them getting to know me.
Overall, the interview process was great. It was very long, going from 9:15am til close to 6pm. Very much a full day of "being on". But, in the end I preferred it over the more traditional style interviews I had encountered at other companies. I got to sit in the office for a full day, meet the people I might be working with, and just in general get a feel for the environment of the office I could potentially be sitting in for the foreseeable future. You don't get that at other places.
The interview process was pretty simple. I think there was maybe one technical interview and one, or two, non-technical interviews with a designer and and PM. The technical interview was with the, then eng lead, and it was some coding and some talking through problems.
Questions d'entretien [1]
Question 1
I don't really remember what the questions where specifically, but some of them were React related.
J'ai postulé en ligne. Le processus a pris 2 semaines. J'ai passé un entretien chez Newfront en oct. 2021
Entretien
It was a ok experience. Interviewd with two developers for a coding challenge. Although I did poorly, one of the developers guided me very well and was really nice to get to a solution with her. The other one left the meeting 15 minutes earlier.
Questions d'entretien [1]
Question 1
Tell us about yourself and your relevant experiences
J'ai postulé via la recommandation d'un employé. Le processus a pris 2 mois. J'ai passé un entretien chez Newfront
Entretien
Had a great interview process with Newfront. The recruiter was super helpful, communicative and flexible with everything. There was an initial recruiter phone screen, followed by an hour long technical phone screen, a values interview, a take home and then the onsite. I only made it till the take home