I applied online. The process took 2 months. I interviewed at Rover.com in May 2024
Interview
Very messy. No recruiter contact before first interview. I was not informed that the first interview would be a coding one. The interviewers are nice but recruiters are not easy to contact.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Lots of behavioural questions (i.e. have you experienced a difficult situation with you project and what did you do?). Further questions depend on the situation you bring.
The process took 2 months. I interviewed at Rover.com
Interview
I was immediately given a take-home exercise before any kind of interview. Then had a very positive interview with the hiring manager, followed by one with a Data Scientist, which was interesting but found out that they would have no direct relationship to the role. As you'll see with another interview experience listed here, the manager added me on LinkedIn and said that there would be some good news coming my way. The good news turned out to be that I'd have a further 4 more hour long interviews with a range of stakeholders which were staggered over a week. I recognise that I wasn't a good fit for the role, but equally, if they had said from the outset that I would have to go through 6 hour-long interviews, plus one recruiter call and a take-home test, I wouldn't have applied. As you'd probably expect, after investing all that time, I got one line of feedback via email and no response when I asked for more detailed feedback. I understand that some businesses want a rigorous process to find the best candidate, but it doesn't seem the best use of anyone's time pulling in 8-9 people from different areas of the business to interview candidates for roles which aren't related to their area.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Take-home test
Lots of behavioural questions i.e. "tell me about a time..."
I applied online. The process took 6 weeks. I interviewed at Rover.com (Barcelona) in Jun 2024
Interview
The hiring process at Rover lasted 1.5 months. Initially, I received a questionnaire, followed by a meeting with the recruiter and then with the manager. I was given a take-home exercise, which I completed and sent back. After that, I heard nothing from Rover for over a week.
I reached out to the recruiter multiple times, but received no response. Strangely, the manager added me on LinkedIn to tell me to be patient and asked if I had any other ongoing processes, which suggested a high level of interest. Eventually, I had another interview with a Data Scientist, whose role in the process was unclear and whose questions didn't relate to the role I was applying for.
Ultimately, I was rejected without any feedback. When I thanked the manager and inquired about feedback, his only response was "Thanks for your time!".
Overall, the process with Rover was frustrating. The recruiters seemed completely disconnected from the process. For a Data Analyst position, this experience felt like a significant waste of time and resources.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
1. Can you please summarize your current/most recent experience? I’m especially interested in any experiments that you supported in that role and ways you influenced the strategy of the organization or team you work with.
2. Do you have any experience managing or mentoring other analysts? If so, can you please summarize that experience?
3. Please explain what you would like to see in your next opportunity, and why you are interested in Rover.
4. What is your experience working with SQL? What is your experience working with Python or R?