My experience with BP's interview process was procedurally courteous but critically flawed in guidance, interviewer capability, and transparency, resulting in an evidently misguided rejection despite my strong qualifications.
Interviews were scheduled promptly, featured the same polite panel across both rounds, and adhered to protocol without delays. However, HR offered zero direction on example selection for the "most important project" presentation, leading me to present an awarded high-visibility delivery. It was dismissed by the panel as routine solution architect work, ignoring my broader strategic portfolio and leadership experience.
The interviewers, absent the hiring manager and appearing less experienced, failed to explore architect-level strategic contributions or apply BP's competency-based STAR framework effectively for deeper evaluation. No post-rejection feedback was provided, leaving candidates without actionable insights, and the proposed 15% hike was uncompetitive for a senior role lacking people management.
While BP maintains surface professionalism, these gaps in preparation support, senior oversight, and feedback undervalue top talent. Recommendations include explicit HR guidance on strategic examples, hiring manager involvement in senior interviews, and detailed rejection rationales to improve future processes.