Le processus a pris 3 semaines. J'ai passé un entretien chez Stanford University (Stanford, CA) en mai 2016
Entretien
Stanford's interview process, at least in the department where I interviewed, seems to be pretty standardized. First you start out with a phone screen, then move on to in-person interviews and possibly second round interviews. A skills test was required for my interview which included a basic excel test (sorting, vlookup etc) which was generally easy if you have used excel before, next was a writing/grammar test ( write a sample email or write a letter describing why you are the best for this job). The most difficult thing about any of my Stanford interviews was the sheer amount of people and time it takes. I interviewed with up to 10 people in one day (individual and panel) and it can be pretty tiring mentally.
Overall, everyone at Stanford was professional, I knew what to expect at every step and I felt my time was valued.
Questions d'entretien [3]
Question 1
Tell me about a time when you had multiple projects and deadlines
Easy process, scheduling was quick.
Interviewed with multiple people in one day, it was a combination of in-person and zoom, it was well coordinated. Everyone was nice. I heard back within a week, as they had shared. The manager was great at answering my questions.
Questions d'entretien [1]
Question 1
Tell me about yourself.
Administrative experience questions.
Working relationships, and conflict resolution.
J'ai postulé via un recruteur. Le processus a pris 5 semaines. J'ai passé un entretien chez Stanford University (Palo Alto, CA) en janv. 2019
Entretien
This was one of the most intensive interview processes I have been through. I get that this is Stanford, but this is essentially an entry level admin role.
I was screened by a recruiter, then took a timed proofreading test and a timed excel skills test.
After that, I had another phone screening. This was followed by a two hour onsite interview which consisted of three group interviews. I then had a final three and a half hour onsite, where I essentially met everyone on their team for four back to back interviews without any scheduled breaks.
Working with the recruiter was interesting to say the least. The info she had provided to her by their team was minimal at best. Itineraries were consistently sent last minute and even she seemed surprised by the number of people I met with in the final round given that this is essentially entry level.
For the final interview, I had less than one day to prep myself mentally for meeting with nine people as previously I had been led to think I was meeting with only one person.
I was barely informed about what the job actually entailed and felt overwhelmed during that final round of interviews. Some of the folks involved seemed very disinterested in what I had to say when they realized how different my background was. It felt very much like I was being talked down to when they began explaining things more clearly.
The person in charge of bringing me to the interview room really set the tone of the day when she first met me, as she was practically appalled when she realized I was the candidate.
I could tell by the second half of the final interviews that I was not going to be offered the job.
What do you do when you need to schedule a meeting in three days time and folks needing to be there aren't responding to your invitation even though you've sent multiple emails about it?
J'ai postulé via la recommandation d'un employé. Le processus a pris 2 semaines. J'ai passé un entretien chez Stanford University
Entretien
Relative quick interview process, if you are able to get through the ATS. Got contacted by recruiter, set up interviews 1 week later. Heard their decision roughly 1 week later. Be prepared for MS Office test that only works with one version.
Questions d'entretien [1]
Question 1
Can you do specific functions in MS PPT and Word in a method defined by the testing software?