I applied through other source. I interviewed at UNiDAYS in Jun 2026
Interview
Three interviewers talked so much and for so long. They asked me only 1 question in the thirty minute long interview and it was a generic "why this job" one. We ran out of time before I could even ask any questions.
When they rejected me they claimed it was because I didn't communicate well ... I couldn't get a word in edgeways. Stop talking about yourselves and ask me some questions. They didn't learn a single thing about me and clearly didn't want to.
They took over a week to tell me I was rejected and that was only after I sent an email asking for an update.
Shockingly bad interviewers
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Why do you want to work at unidays
What a generic none informative question.
I applied online. I interviewed at UNiDAYS (London, England) in Jun 2025
Interview
I completed the first round of the interview successfully and was invited for a second interview. Unfortunately, I missed the second interview due to an unavoidable situation. After that, I requested another opportunity, but I was not given a chance to continue the process. The communication after that was limited, and the process ended there.
I applied online. The process took 2 weeks. I interviewed at UNiDAYS in Feb 2026
Interview
The process itself was well-organised and the people I met throughout were warm, personable and clearly passionate about the company. From a culture perspective, UNiDAYS came across really well and I could see why people enjoy working there.
However, I'd encourage the team to review how they screen candidates earlier in the process. I reached the final interview stage before being rejected for concerns, specifically around my product design background that were visible from my CV and portfolio from the outset. The feedback I received also acknowledged that these areas weren't deeply explored during the interviews, which made it difficult to understand what I could have done differently.
It left me feeling that time on both sides could have been saved with a more structured screening process upfront. For candidates considering applying, I'd suggest being very explicit about your experience early on, even if it feels obvious from your portfolio.