Glassdoor users rated their interview experience at RockED as 20% positive with a difficulty rating score of 2.4 out of 5 (where 5 is the highest level of difficulty). Candidates interviewing for AI/ML Intern and Backend Developer rated their interviews as the hardest, whereas interviews for Software Development Engineer In Test (SDET) and Engineering Manager roles were rated as the easiest.
I applied online. I interviewed at RockED (Atlanta, GA) in May 2026
Interview
Unprofessional company who will ghost you after the interview process. Went through multiple interviews and interview heard back even after sending a follow up a up email. Company does not respect people’s time
I had a poor experience during this interview process, especially after a 3-hour drive.
The initial coding setup was outdated (CommonJS), and I had to spend time converting it to ES6 before starting. During the interview, I was repeatedly questioned about using a second screen, which was distracting and felt unprofessional, even involving HR at one point.
The tasks themselves were simple, but constant interruptions made it harder to perform.
I applied online. I interviewed at RockED in Mar 2026
Interview
The interview process was extremely unstructured and poorly managed. I was initially told there would be 4 rounds, which I completed. After that, I was asked to visit the office for “one final round,” which turned into 3 additional rounds on-site. In total, I spent around 7+ hours interviewing.
Despite these red flags, I continued because the company appeared to be in a growth phase, and I was willing to consider the role even at ~20% lower compensation than my current salary.
What was more concerning was the lack of clarity even at the recruiter level. When I asked if I should prepare data structures, I was told “yes,” followed by a comment about them using MySQL, which clearly shows confusion between data structures and databases. This raised serious concerns about how well the process and expectations are actually defined internally.
Finally, after clearing all rounds, I was informed that they would not proceed because they found someone willing to join at significantly lower pay (almost half). This clearly indicates that the hiring decision was driven more by cost than by experience or capability.
Advice to Management: If you want senior talent, you have to pay for it. If you want the cheapest labor possible, don't waste 7 hours of a senior professional's time.