I went through the interview process for the Director of Business Development – K–12 EDU role. The role itself is genuinely interesting and the product ecosystem has real potential. Unfortunately, the interview experience was inconsistent and raised concerns about internal alignment, communication, and accessibility.
Pros
* The role is strategically important and the job description reflects a thoughtful, complex set of responsibilities around K–12 networking, E-rate, strategy, and partner ecosystems.
* Several conversations provided clear insight into how the vertical teams operate, how overlay roles support sales, and how growth targets are set.
* The company clearly wants to expand in the K–12 market and sees this vertical as high potential.
Cons
1. Contradictory communication about interview stages.
I was told the company needed to hire quickly because the role had been open since June. After the second interview, I was told I was moving to the **“final round.”** The next interview, however, was described as merely the **end of “Phase One,”** which was not at all what had been communicated.
This mismatch set the tone for an unclear, shifting process.
2. A second interview that was inappropriate, inconsistent, and not aligned with ADA guidelines.
One interview sharply diverged from the rest of the process, shifting into an unexpectedly adversarial, compliance-heavy interrogation about E-rate technicalities, contract cycles, and procurement minutiae. The tone and pacing did not match a senior business development role, nor did it align with the more strategic, collaborative nature of the other conversations.
Afterward, I told the recruiter directly that the interview was inappropriate, that the style and framing were not aligned with the role, and that the way certain questions were delivered violated ADA accommodation guidelines. I was transparent and professional in raising the concern.
3. The process suddenly ended with an “internal candidate” explanation.
A few days after the interview I was told was the final stage, the recruiter informed me they had selected an internal candidate.
This contradicted earlier messaging about urgency and about needing someone external with K–12 depth. The abrupt shift, especially after I raised ADA concerns, made the continuation of the process feel more procedural than substantive.
4. No coherent evaluation framework across interviewers.
Each interviewer evaluated completely different skill sets with no apparent shared rubric:
* One focused on high-level strategy, partner ecosystems, and vertical alignment.
* One focused solely on compliance minutiae in a manner inconsistent with the job description and the other interviews.
* Another focused on organizational structure, enablement, and cross-functional planning.
Individually, these discussions made sense, but together they did not form a unified evaluation experience.
RUCKUS/CommScope has strong products, talented people, and a compelling opportunity in the K–12 market. But the interview process I experienced was fragmented, unclear, and at one point crossed into accessibility issues that required formal feedback.
Clearer communication, consistent evaluation criteria, and ADA-compliant practices would greatly improve the candidate experience.