There are many scary stories floating around about Google interviews, but it’s mostly just
that: stories. The interview is not terribly different from Microsoft’s or Amazon’s. However,
because Google HR can be a little disorganized, we recommend being proactive in communication.
A Google engineer performs the first phone screen, so expect tough technical questions.
On your on-site interview, you'll interview with four to six people, one of whom will be a
lunch interviewer. Interviewer feedback is kept confidential from the other interviewers, so
you can be assured that you enter each interview with blank slate. Your lunch interviewer
doesn’t submit feedback, so this is a great opportunity to ask honest questions.
Written feedback is submitted to a hiring committee of engineers to make a hire/no-hire
recommendation. Feedback is typically broken down into four categories (Analytical Ability,
Coding, Experience and Communication) and you are given a score from 1.0 to 4.0 overall.
The hiring committee understands that you can’t be expected to excel in every interview,
but if multiple people raise the same
red flag (arrogance, poor coding skills,
etc), that can disqualify you. A hiring
committee typically wants to see one
interviewer who is an “enthusiastic endorser.” In other words, a packet with
scores of 3.6, 3.1, 3.1 and 2.6 is better
than all 3.1s. Your phone screen is usually not a strong factor in the final decision.
The Google hiring process can be slow.
If you don’t hear back within one week,
politely ask your recruiter for an update. A lack of response says nothing
about your performance.
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