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      Product Specialist Interview

      23 Apr 2019
      Anonymous interview candidate
      Provo, UT
      Declined offer
      Negative experience
      Average interview

      Application

      The process took 6 weeks. I interviewed at Qualtrics (Provo, UT) in Mar 2019

      Interview

      My review will be longer, but ~well~ worth the read if you're a serious, qualified candidate: 1. I received an invitation to a phone screening that was conducted by a recruiter. She was professional and successfully accomplished the goals of the screening. She was great! 2. I was invited to take a technical assessment that involved completing 3 modules from an online Stanford computer science course. The assessment involved answering several recollection questions as well as checking simple code for errors or answering what the string would return if run (e.g. "Here's a table of data and a string of code using the print command. If this script were run, what would the result be?" You then check for errors or select the names that would be returned if no errors are present). It was around 30 questions, and harder than I expected (but not terribly challenging for most STEM or business grads). I was informed later that an 80% was required to pass. I really liked this approach to technical assessments, as opposed to giving an IQ test that pretends its not an IQ test for legal reasons (looking at you, Wonderlic test). I was impressed by this step as well! 3. I was then invited to schedule a video interview with a manager who oversaw one of the teams that I was interviewing for. He was 15 minutes late to the video interview and had not bothered to look over my resume prior to the call (I resisted the urge to invite him to reschedule for after he'd had time to prepare). His social interactions seemed feigned, and he only came across as genuine one time that I recall. He seemed to stick to a predetermined script rather than conducting a real interview. I'm not sure if he was having a bad day or was simply inexperienced at interviewing. I certainly understand both happen, but he did a poor job of both asking questions and assessing responses. I've included descriptions of these interactions with the questions themselves, listed below. He explained his goal was threefold: Determine how I approach problem solving, observe my ability to explain technical concepts, and establish a history of past success. He failed the first and the third. The video interview dissuaded me from pursuing them as an employer, and even if I hadn't already received another offer I would have considered turning them down. **REMEMBER (or realize) that you're interviewing them as much as they're interviewing you. If you're getting to the interview process with Qualtrics then you're clearly a highly qualified candidate that many employers would love to have. Don't limit yourself because you feel the need to accept the first offer that comes your way.** Some time ago I watched a lecture talking about our current education system, applicable to this experience. I'll paraphrase a summary: "Our educations system teaches you that when you're given a problem to solve, there's one correct answer to this problem, and that answer is located in the back of the book-- but don't look it up, that's cheating! Real-world career work is the opposite of that. There's rarely one answer to a problem, and if you can look the answer up, you do! It would be a poor use of time to solve a problem that already has been answered. In this way our education process does a poor job training people for real careers." This interview really backed up that analysis. If you're an experienced professional, approach your application here with caution. They clearly prioritize scholastic accomplishments, research paper publication, standardized test scores, etc. as more valuable than experience and the value you've added to your past companies. It was very clear this team "leader" was more concerned with checking boxes and filling company-given requirements rather than conducting a real interview. His approach to the first and third questions illustrate this (details found below in the answers portions of the Q&A). While I do think there's a lot of opportunity for qualified "just graduated" applicants to get experience (its a good name to put on your resume) before moving on to another more innovation-appreciating employer, it seems the value just isn't there for candidates who are already accomplished and are interested in further innovation and problem solving. Unfortunately it looks like they've grown past the ingenuity-employee phase and entered the follower-employee phase. I'm interested in innovating and problem solving, not script following. In my estimation they'll continue to qualify script-followers if they continue to handle their interviews like this.

      Interview questions [3]

      Question 1

      How would you determine the number of dogs in Salt Lake?
      1 Answer

      Question 2

      Teach me something technical as if I'm unfamiliar with it.
      1 Answer

      Question 3

      Establishing a past history of successful performance, as it is the greatest indicator of future success.
      1 Answer
      1

      Other Product Specialist interview reviews for Qualtrics

      Product Specialist Interview

      13 Mar 2026
      Anonymous interview candidate
      Salt Lake City, UT
      No offer
      Positive experience
      Easy interview

      Application

      I interviewed at Qualtrics (Salt Lake City, UT)

      Interview

      First, a screening call with an opportunity to ask questions and verify that you understand the job requirements loosely. Then, A series of Zoom Interviews with various members from different teams.

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      How many cereal boxes are sold in your home state?
      1 Answer

      Product Specialist Interview

      9 Jan 2026
      Anonymous interview candidate
      No offer
      Positive experience
      Average interview

      Application

      I applied online. I interviewed at Qualtrics

      Interview

      Very straightforward typical straight forward behavioral questions “tell me a time you solved a difficult problem” etc. She asked a lot of follow up questions to stories so make sure you go detailed. Didn’t have a ton of questions prepped so again, it’s beneficial go in detail.

      Product Specialist Interview

      9 Oct 2025
      Anonymous employee
      Tokyo
      Accepted offer
      Positive experience
      Average interview

      Application

      I applied online. I interviewed at Qualtrics (Tokyo) in Oct 2025

      Interview

      There are three interviews in total. All the interviewers were friendly, open minded and easy to talk with. They asked about the difficult thing I needed to deal with and how I overcame it, how I handled the situation when I couldn't handle it the way I usually do, and what was the difficult experience in my past customer experience and how I successfully handled it.

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      Describe one the difficult experiences I went through and how I overcame it.
      Answer question