I applied online. The process took 1+ week. I interviewed at Bizo
Interview
Three phone interviews (over three days) and three in person interviews (all in one session). The interviews were a pleasure. I got along with everyone so well and conversation flowed so easily that they didn't even feel like interviews. The final step was providing a brief writing sample.
A lot of the interviews are focused on whether you're a good fit culturally. Bizo doesn't hire @$$holes. Everyone in the company, including/especially senior management is always ready to roll up their sleeves and work hard.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
I didn't find any of the questions difficult or unexpected. They really just want to get a sense of what you'll be like to work with.
I applied online. The process took 2 weeks. I interviewed at Bizo (New York, NY) in Nov 2013
Interview
I applied via the company website and received a response relatively shortly thereafter. A phone conversation with an internal recruiter followed. Next, there was a phone interview with the department leader, followed by in-person interviews with 2 current employees. After that, another round of in-person interviews occurred, this time with 3 current employees. Finally, I was assigned a sample project, to be reviewed in one last phone interview. Needless to say, an applicant must be prepared for a long, involved process.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
The project proved most difficult. It required the applicant to devise a media plan for a fictional client. Although expectations for the project were said to be low, it was — without a doubt — the determining factor in the process.
I applied through an employee referral. The process took 1+ week. I interviewed at Bizo
Interview
Really interesting company with what sounds like a great group of skilled engineers. Flexible schedules, remote workers, agile practices, conference stipend, etc. The startup vibe seems to be fading a bit, but they are well funded and have a solid product and customer base.
Initial communication was via email. Video chat "phone" interview was about 2 hours. It appeared as though they had not really looked at my resume. They provided a very detailed description of their business and what the job would consist of. It sounded like the ideal place to work remotely. I liked their focus on general practitioners rather than demands for specific skills. There was no NDA.
Everything went well until they wanted to do a coding exercise on collabedit.com. I was expecting something related to the primary job that I would be performing (Front-end development), but was given a back-end focused question. I was also expecting to analyze or modify existing code, but I was given a blank page and told to design an unrelated system in 20 minutes.
This caught me off guard and I basically blew it by not asking the right questions and remembering which data structures to use. I normally don't get nervous in interviews, but this one made me extremely nervous and left me exhausted afterwards.
I received a brief email the next day letting me know that they were not interested and wishing me luck in my job search.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Design a RESTFUL Servlet back-end interface for an online chat server from scratch.