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      .NET Developer Interview

      25 Jan 2016
      Anonymous employee
      Austin, TX
      Accepted offer
      Positive experience
      Average interview

      Application

      I applied online. The process took 2 weeks. I interviewed at ENGAGENCY (Austin, TX) in Jan 2015

      Interview

      The interview process is very straightforward. There will be a quick chat with either the CEO or with the team, to gauge personality etc. Following the interview, there is a simple code exercise that requires the use of C# and ASP.NET. If you pass the code exercize, there's typically a logic problem that is sent out, and you'll be timed on your completion, it's not very hard. After that, the team will decide if they want you in or out. That's about it!

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      Q: What are you looking for in a job?
      1 Answer
      1

      Other .NET Developer interview reviews for ENGAGENCY

      .NET Developer Interview

      3 Feb 2018
      Anonymous interview candidate
      Austin, TX
      No offer
      Positive experience
      Average interview

      Application

      I applied online. The process took 1 week. I interviewed at ENGAGENCY (Austin, TX) in Jan 2017

      Interview

      I applied through LinkedIn and was contacted by shortly afterwards. The first part of the process was speaking to the president and CEO, and it was a very pleasant conversation and questions about my background. I was able to get a good feel for the expectations of the role and what they were looking for in terms of a candidate. I think the part I appreciated the most was that he was very candid about the nature of the work, and gave me a long term vision of the company. The Next step was a code exercise. I was given 3 days to complete. Make sure you take advantage the time frame you were given, and try to set aside at least a Saturday to complete (I made the mistake of completing it during my work week). The Algorithm they gave me was not complex (My feeling was that it wasn't meant to be an academic), but there was a UI component that was a little tricky if you're not familiar with industry standard modern UI frameworks. After submitting my application, I was later informed that they went with another candidate. Overall I had a fun experience! The coding Exercise was fun, and the CEO was very nice and seemed to have a vested interested in hiring quality candidates that can hit the road running. Would love to apply again someday if the right opportunity came along.

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      Build a UI from the following Sceenshots
      Answer question
      1
      avatar
      ENGAGENCY response
      8y
      Thank you so much for your very kind feedback! I really enjoyed getting to know you and I'm sorry that things didn't work out. I look forward to keeping in touch. Best of luck with your job search. I hope you find the perfect gig!

      .NET Developer Interview

      11 Apr 2017
      Anonymous interview candidate
      Austin, TX
      Declined offer
      Negative experience
      Easy interview

      Application

      I applied online. The process took 3 months. I interviewed at ENGAGENCY (Austin, TX) in Nov 2016

      Interview

      This is the worst interview experience I have ever had. I was attracted to the position listing online because of the cute-sy description - something about having a “heart of gold.” Everything in the interview process was facilitated through the CEO, Jason Perry. After every step in the interview process, he was extremely negligent about getting back to me. Other than that, everything went pretty smoothly, and I was pretty sure I was on-track to get the position. Upon having lunch with the team, I realized this is a 6-person company: the CEO, his WIFE, and their 4 employees. In the office, he and his wife have offices and everyone else sits at a big table in the center of a dark room - kind of messed up IMO. Anyway, I received a call from Jason telling me he wanted to offer me the position, but it was a really “busy” time, and he wouldn’t be able to put it together for a week or two. That might’ve been okay except for the fact that he knew I had another offer on the table, and I was trying to speed up the process on Engagency’s end. I was very transparent about that. He didn’t want me to have any negotiating power. I mentioned salary, and he told me the offer was going to be some number that I must have mentioned about 3 months prior (like I said, he was extremely negligent in getting back to me.) I told him about a sign-on bonus I was currently being offered by another company, and if he was able to offer something similar, I could accept immediately. He immediately told me the offer was non-negotiable. I said that was okay, but I would need a few days to consider the offer in that case. That’s when he completely flipped: He began telling me that I was only motivated by money, and he was rethinking giving me an offer because I was showing my “true character.” He then told me I was overconfident, didn’t have much to bring to the table, and that I should be thankful he was offering me the position. He ranted about these points for about 5 minutes. Eventually I had to end the conversation by telling him that if he didn’t see me as a valuable candidate, he shouldn’t bother putting together a formal offer for me. Several months later, I still can’t believe someone would be so rude and unprofessional. Ironic because “good character” was something that was really stressed during the interview process.

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      .NET 3-day coding challenge, Skype presentation to the team, 1 laughably easy math question, and a "character test"
      Answer question
      8
      avatar
      ENGAGENCY response
      9y
      Dear Anonymous Interview Candidate. I’m sorry that you felt compelled to write this review. I truly wish things had gone better between us. However, there are some exaggerations and omissions of fact in your review, which I feel misrepresent the true nature of our interactions that I now feel obligated to address. There is no doubt that you seemed to be a very bright and capable young woman when I interviewed you. However, you failed to mention in your review that you told me you were looking to leave your first job out of college because your employer had not assigned any work to you in the 6 months that you’d been employed there. So, quite frankly, you had no professional experience to speak of at the time. Nevertheless, we were willing to give you an opportunity to prove yourself as a junior developer, based solely on your ability to pass our programming exercise, your code presentation, and the math problem you solved, with ease. You crushed it, and we were impressed. We are a woman owned and run business and were excited to give a young woman like yourself an opportunity to grow and establish a career in web technology. You claim I was negligent in getting back to you; however when you applied for the job I was very transparent about the fact that, at the time, we were up to 90 days out from being able to bring someone on board. Perhaps, that is why it took me 3-months to present the offer. Also, throughout the interview process you told me that you were perfectly happy with our standard starting salary range and our 3,6,9, and 12-month performance reviews and salary adjustments. I was very clear about the reasons that this type of salary structure is our policy. You seemed to understand that and agree. So, you can imagine my surprise when after offering you the position, you wanted to re-negotiate salary. The appropriate time to negotiate this would have been prior to the offer being made, and frankly had you requested the starting salary and bonus you requested at that time from the get go, I wouldn’t have made the offer. After I made the offer to hire you on the terms I thought we had agreed to, you told me you had a higher offer from another employer that included a signing bonus. Whether or not that was truly the case, it is not unheard of for candidates to bluff about having other offers and I had to go with my instincts on this one. My instincts led me to believe that this other offer you were describing to me was very unlikely given your lack of experience. This was one of the reasons that I didn’t agree to match it. I still believe my instincts were correct; especially since according to your LinkedIn profile you are still working at the same employer that you were with when you applied for the position in November of last year- the one that wasn’t giving you any work. If the other offer were truly there, I’d imagine you would have gladly accepted such an amazing offer, and would not now be having such negative feelings about not accepting the offer with Engagency. Lastly, in your review you mention your displeasure with our office situation. I want to clarify that the office situation you described in your review was temporary and allowed us to keep our fees down for our customers while saving up enough money to acquire a beautiful new office. Our new office is in a brand new building in a very desirable part of South West Austin near Circle C. It's twice the size, it has 10 foot ceilings and large windows throughout– so everyone has tons of natural light. We bought new furniture, ergonomic chairs, adjustable height desks, and a sound masking system that will create a wonderful modern environment for everyone to work and collaborate. I’m sorry you won’t get a chance to join us.