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      Credit Karma

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      Engineering Manager Interview

      24 Sept 2018
      Anonymous interview candidate
      San Francisco, CA
      No offer
      Positive experience
      Average interview

      Application

      I applied online. The process took 3 weeks. I interviewed at Credit Karma (San Francisco, CA) in Sept 2018

      Interview

      tl;dr: No offer but good experience, except for one interviewer. 1st phone screen was with recruiter who asked questions on my overall background and interests. 2nd phone screen was with a senior manager who focused on my recent experience, interests and skills. Onsite: I had 4 technical rounds, and 1 non-technical round that focused purely on behavioral and team management aspects. The 4 technical rounds were as follows: 1. Questions on design and architecture of distributed systems. 2. Mix of system design, previous projects and management style discussions. 3. Focused on a previous distributed systems project, with a large data set problem and a database related question. 4. Whiteboard coding round with a slight mix of management related questions. I had a rather unpleasant experience with one individual. This person had a condescending bearing throughout the interview. The nadir came when he asked me a database related question which I answered as best I could, unfortunately to be met with outright derisive laughter on his part. I took that as my solution being incorrect in his eye and presented a different approach only to elicit the same odious reaction from him. I let it pass at that moment, but later on verified that my original answer was actually exactly how engineering teams at many tech companies solved the problem. Of course, there are alternate ways to tackle this problem as well and perhaps the interviewer had one of those ways in mind. Nevertheless his behavior was quite uncouth and unprofessional. One of the cultural values at Credit Karma is supposedly "EMPATHY - We seek first to understand, then be understood". If only they would first ensure their employees understood their own values before spouting them in emails to candidates. To be fair, I should point out that this particular individual's first language and medium of instruction in his native country is not English, so perhaps he has had some difficulty in understanding Credit Karma's values. I did have some trouble communicating with him. As I was walking him through one of my previous distributed systems projects (scale of billions; RPS in millions; globally distributed), he made supercilious remarks quite a few times insinuating how trivial it was and how easy it would have been for him to work on it, while ironically failing to grasp lot of the fundamental concepts. I thought perhaps he had difficulties in comprehension due to linguistic issues and often had to repeat things in a slow and simplified manner just so we could try and find some common ground. Other than this one individual, I enjoyed speaking to the rest of the panel. They were all technically sound within the context of their current work at Credit Karma and perhaps their immediate prior workplace. Most questions were focused around problems they had encountered and/or resolved. The interviewers were comfortable with the distributed systems and microservices domain from an application level, but they seemed foundationally unaware about some of the core concepts. For instance, couple of them (including the aforementioned obnoxious person) who focused on distributed systems questions had no idea about Paxos or Raft and had not heard about distributed consensus or leader election algorithms. Based on the body language of some of the interviewers, it seemed that if the given answer did not align with what the interviewer had in mind, that would very likely go against the candidate, irrespective of the trade-offs between the different approaches. One of them did not seem very happy when I presented an approach for a service discovery question that used an open source Apache technology that he had clearly not heard about. Or, for that matter when I answered a question about dealing with very high computational load on a single instance of a microservice by presenting a solution using horizontal scaling and asynchronous distributed computation patterns. Or, when I pointed out that simple round-robin load balancing could very well lead to undesirable loads on certain instances. This broadly agreed with my observation about the interviewers' technical strengths being drawn more from specific usage experience and prior application patterns rather than the conceptual aspects of distributed systems. I failed to answer a relatively easy question on security but the solution just slipped my mind at that time, and faltered on another broadly related to MapReduce, although I did come up with the right algorithm. And of course my answer to the database question clearly was very amusing to that one particular interviewer. All said and done, overall I gained a few things from the interview experience, especially since I was interviewing after more than a decade, so thanks to Credit Karma for the opportunity. They have some interesting problems at hand as they scale their business, user base and organization, and I wish their efforts well.

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      Questions on security, scaling, microservices, MapReduce, database, management style.
      Answer question
      7

      Other Engineering Manager interview reviews for Credit Karma

      Engineering Manager Interview

      17 Apr 2022
      Anonymous interview candidate
      No offer
      Negative experience
      Average interview

      Application

      I applied online. The process took 3 months. I interviewed at Credit Karma in Feb 2022

      Interview

      Three interview sessions, one with a recruiter, one with direct line manager, and one 4 hour session with 4 stakeholders (peers, technical, HR). All went well, communication was good, people were nice although a number of interviewers mentioned that they were stressed a lot of the time. After the final session, communication with Credit Karma went dead. No feedback, no updates, etc. Chased them up for feedback after a month but again no contact or even an acknowledgment of my email. I'm assuming at this point a number of months later after numerous attempts at a follow up I will not be receiving a job offer! However, feedback would have been appreciated from a company that seems to push the "culture" of openness they have internally.

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      What does management mean to you?
      Answer question
      1

      Engineering Manager Interview

      18 Apr 2025
      Anonymous employee
      Charlotte, NC
      Accepted offer
      Positive experience
      Average interview

      Application

      I applied online. The process took 4 weeks. I interviewed at Credit Karma (Charlotte, NC) in Jan 2021

      Interview

      5 rounds of interview. Recruiter cal People management, delivery management, systems design, Hiring manager round. Pretty good experience Accepted the offer and joined the company. So far the company has been good

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      Design a marketplace that is personalized and multi platform
      Answer question

      Engineering Manager Interview

      25 Jul 2019
      Anonymous interview candidate
      San Francisco, CA
      No offer
      Negative experience
      Average interview

      Application

      I applied through an employee referral. I interviewed at Credit Karma (San Francisco, CA)

      Interview

      I had originally connected with Credit Karma via an employee referral and met up with a couple of people in their engineering organization. Those meetings went well so several months later I decided to apply for a position there and was invited for an onsite interview. Unfortunately the process for the onsite was pretty disorganized. I asked for some general guidance on how to prepare for the interview and was told "we don't really know." The onsite was originally scheduled to last nearly all day, but when I arrived in the morning I was told they had cut out two sessions at the end because people like to leave early on Friday afternoons. Okay, but didn't they know the day of the week in advance? The different conversations during the onsite generally went fine, however about mid-way through the process it dawned on me that the job I was interviewing for that day might not the same as the job I had originally discussed with them. That is also understandable as needs obviously can change over several months, but why didn't they clarify that with me beforehand? At the end of the onsite I let them know that I was actively interviewing and expected to choose an offer soon. A couple of weeks later I got a message from them asking for a meeting to discuss feedback. I replied promptly but they never acknowledged my response. Several days later I let them know I had taken another offer and again received no response at all, not even a form letter rejection. I assume they didn't plan to make me an offer but I don't actually know. This is pretty bad, anyone who comes for an onsite interview should receive a clear decision. My overall impression of the organization is that for a relatively small company they are very leadership-heavy (or title-conscious) with lots of managers, sr. managers, directors, sr. directors, etc. but maybe not enough people to do the actual work.

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      Mostly behavioral, focusing on project and people management with some light technical and architectural discussion.
      1 Answer
      2