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      Software Engineer Tools and Infrastructure Interview

      4 Aug 2017
      Anonymous interview candidate
      Seattle, WA
      No offer
      Positive experience
      Difficult interview

      Application

      I applied through a recruiter. I interviewed at Google (Seattle, WA) in Jul 2017

      Interview

      First I had a very light software screening that seemed to validate that I do know at least about what I claim on my resume. Interview after a week on site with 5 engineers (2 of them SETI) It was an amazing experience. All interviewers were very friendly. They made me feel way less stress than what I was. Questions and problems are addressed like two co-workers trying to figure something out.

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      Remove duplicates in a list. Optimize time complexity.
      Answer question
      4

      Other Software Engineer Tools and Infrastructure interview reviews for Google

      Software Engineer (Tools and Infrastructure) Interview

      14 Aug 2019
      Anonymous interview candidate
      Sunnyvale, CA
      No offer
      Negative experience
      Average interview

      Application

      I applied online. The process took 12 months. I interviewed at Google (Sunnyvale, CA) in May 2019

      Interview

      From beginning to end, the interview process was disorganized, drawn out, mistake driven, with a lot of "apologies" and "no exceptions" to the process, irregardless of the highly impersonal nature of the "process" or the lack of competence involved. I applied in the fall for a position and the recruiter I spoke with (4 months after my application... cough) warned the "process" takes time, so at least expectations that wall clock time would be exhausted was set, flexibility was required, and certainly acceptable (it's "Google", right?). The problems however started right away: scheduling a simple phone screen was a fiasco as while being asked to provide availability, time of day was consistently overlooked (the coordinators are not in the US and clearly unable to handle time zone differences). The candidate is often asked to overlook the mistake and take the interview anyway (refusing resulted in many rescheduling attempts). I ultimately withdrew from the opening, but seeing a very appealing opening reposted decided to try again... personal mistake. Another 2 months of mis-scheduling persisted before a phone screen finally was correctly scheduled. The On-Site interview was inclusive of confused travel plans with lost or incorrect reservations for transportation to/from the interview (which were resolved, albeit the day of travel on the way out the door... not at all a good impression). Arriving on-site no schedule was provided though at least when the interview would be over was in the e-mail. That's all that was provided regarding the interviews for the day and "going with the flow" seemed paramount if only leaving yet another bad impression. About a week later feedback from the On-Site interview was ready and "positive", so the recommendation was to move on to the Hiring Committee. The process is that a "packet" is created and feedback would come a week or two later. However, no "packet' was created for the interview for well in excess of 2 months, only then to receive the "last piece" of feedback which instead triggered more On-Site interviews. What is "positive" feedback if it takes months to write up the results of an interview? The real regret at this point was not pausing, reflecting, and recognizing the ridiculousness of the "process", and that simply withdrawing from the charade was more sensible when the feedback for the "packet" had mysteriously disappeared for such an extended period of time. Nevertheless, it's "Google" so the next on-site was scheduled, albeit scheduled to start in the middle of the night (which asking for that to be corrected took a week...), and upon arrival the schedule was completely incorrect (the schedule was for 2.5 hours of On-Site interviews, but the interviewer said I was expected to stay for 3.5 to 4 hours... ... really?!). Again, a lost opportunity to simply walk away and move on. The result of the process was a "no", though the other warning was the second On-Site was sold as an attempt to determine the proper hiring level (L3, L4, L5, L6, etc.). That sounded reasonable, but given the end result that statement by the recruiter was a false pretense and so caution is highly recommended _if_ asked for a second interview. Don't believe the recruiter if they state the additional interview is for level setting -- it's not, you're starting over, or perhaps losing a "packet" for over 2 months means no one apparently knows what's going on... not surprising in retrospect but also a sign of general incompetence. On a positive note: the cafeteria was indeed nice, and I now truly understand the term "brilliant jerk" after my experience. I personally can't envision ever applying again -- good life experience, but trying again after the experience would be the equivalent of "fool me twice". The benefits may be supposedly awesome, but some things just aren't worth it. I simply hope my drawn out tale helps someone recognize when Google's "process" is worth withdrawing from... I saw it three times and tried because it's "Google" and sincerely regret that.

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      Describe a time when your organization was in transition and how you helped them move forward?
      Answer question
      1

      Software Engineer, Tools and Infrastructure Interview

      5 May 2019
      Anonymous interview candidate
      Mountain View, CA
      No offer
      Positive experience
      Difficult interview

      Application

      I applied through university. The process took 6 weeks. I interviewed at Google (Mountain View, CA) in Mar 2019

      Interview

      I will first start out by saying that Google's interview process was excellent (when it comes to HR and scheduling). The recruiters are extremely professional and friendly. I got an online test with two questions. It was of average difficulty. I didn't get any tricky questions (no recursion or graphs and such). Passed that. Then around a week after, I was contacted to schedule a phone interview. A week before the phone interview, I was suddenly informed that there are no more regular software engineer roles and that I would have to choose between SETI or Site Reliability. I chose SETI and was given an onsite immediately. I don't know why the phone interview was skipped. To my knowledge, it's either because I did extremely well on the online test and wrote beautiful code and/or because I informed them that I was interviewing with another company. I had two weeks to intensively prepare. I HIGHLY recommend Leetcode. Buy the premium membership and practice their most popular problems and attempt to finish the Google Interview Preperation module in the explore tab (at the very least). Focus on your weaknesses. In my case, it was dynamic programming, recursion and graphs. Feel free to memorize but do understand the problem solving process for different kinds of problems. Also, go over cracking the coding interview (after you're done with Leetcode) and try to quickly solve as many problems as possible out loud, write down pseudocode then check out solutions. PRO TIP: Try to minimize stress. Don't pressure yourself too much. The Google interview process has a very large number of factors. You can ace all questions and still not get the job. Your odds of getting the job are already low so don't make it worse with stress! Go there, do your best and enjoy yourself. In my case, all transportation was taken care of. Interview day, you check in at the main desk and you are greeted by your first interviewer. Each interviewer, including the lunch interviewer, have your schedule. When it comes to interview questions, they are all Leetcode questions and some have small twists on them. Make sure you are prepared for all sorts of questions. You really can get anything. You might get 4 string manipulations questions or 4 graph problems. Make sure you know everything: DP, recursion, Tree and graph traversal and how to implement them iteratively and recursively, data structures, etc. Also, note that one of the interviews will be by a SETI and this interview will involve some focus on how you test your code. Make sure you brush up on how to test code properly. At the end of the day, your last interviewer simply drops you off outside and that's it (that's how it was for me at least). After the interview, the feedback of each interviewer (the feedback they write is lengthy and extensive) is sent to your recruiter. She then forms a packet and sends to the hiring committee. The committee meets up every 1 or 2 weeks. Before the meeting, committee members receive the packets of candidates from the previous week or two, go over them and put a grade /4. At the time of the meeting, the scores of the candidates are processed and shown in front of the whole committee. Data stats (average, median, etc.) might be used to make sense of the scores. Usually, people below a certain score are let go and those with high scores have a very high chance of getting an offer. Those in the middle are most likely let go although some might receive follow-up extra interviews in rare cases. (This information is based on research that I did before the interview) All in all, it was a smooth process. Please don't stress out about this. The fact that you reached on-site interviews is a big achievement. Google gave me the confidence to tackle another interview that was scheduled a week later and I got the offer for that. Best of luck!!

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      Leetcode > CtCI. Focus on leetcode to iron out your weaknesses and CtCI to learn the best techniques for specific problems.
      Answer question
      12

      Software Engineer, Tools and Infrastructure Interview

      11 Feb 2019
      Anonymous employee
      Mountain View, CA
      Accepted offer
      Positive experience
      Difficult interview

      Application

      I applied online. The process took 3 months. I interviewed at Google (Mountain View, CA)

      Interview

      Interesting questions with follow up that tackles scale, generics, and handling arbitrary input/conditions. The interviewers were friendly and well prepared. I did not feel rushed by them at all. Recommendations for others: - Identify proper DS(s) to use - Identify a brute force solution first - Manually solve by hand - Identify Big O before even writing code - Identify computational/space bottleneck - Reduce to sub-problem and/or optimize - Code it out
      5

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