The process was unnecessarily long. I had three (or four...I don't remember) phone interviews and then an onsite interview. The first phone interview went very well, but it took two weeks for them to get back to me. The second one also went well, but I didn't hear back from them until I emailed. After receiving my email they scheduled another phone interview with me. Then they invited me to interview on-site. Since I didn't live in NY, I asked if they would cover transportation costs; they didn't get back to me. A week later I found out that I had another interview in NY, so I made it up there and interviewed with Continuity in person. Since I had two interviews in one day, I only spent 45 minutes interviewing with Continuity while giving them some excuse as to why. I interviewed with the two guys in charge. One of them told me that they were trying to hire as many people as possible since the firm is supposedly growing rapidly (although it didn't seem that way when I visited). The interview wasn't great, but it wasn't bad either, just average. As I was leaving I was told that I would be contacted to schedule another on-site interview. I was never contacted. After that, I was fed up and stopped trying to get in touch with them.
I don't care that I wasn't offered a position. What upset me was that I had to jump through hoops to figure out where my application stood. Towards the end it felt like there was no set or establish process to conduct interviews, and that they were stringing me along.