I applied through university. The process took 2 weeks. I interviewed at Skylight Financial Group (Columbus, OH) in Nov 2017
Interview
they called 4 hours after I applied and I set up an interview. After reading reviews online, I was apprehensive going into the interview but adequately prepared. They make you ask questions the whole time. My interview was only about 40 minutes because I ran out of questions to ask. They definitely sugar coat the whole process, acting like they'll hold your hand but really telling you they won't. Within 5 minutes after I had sat down he had thrown out a salary number ($80,000) which made me really uncomfortable. I took the second interview for experience, and then declined the third. I'm not interested in selling out my personal network to them.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Tell me about yourself, where you went to high school, and what you've studied
I applied through university. The process took 4 weeks. I interviewed at Skylight Financial Group (Cleveland, OH) in Jun 2016
Interview
Easy, mainly to see if you can hold a conversation. 3 seperate interviews:
1. Check out office, ask as many questions as you can
2. Behavioral based questions
3. Meet with 3 different members of management and they talk most of the time
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
They will tell you three random words (ex: duck, house, apple) and later in the interview ask you to repeat them back
I applied through other source. The process took 4 weeks. I interviewed at Skylight Financial Group (Cleveland, OH) in May 2016
Interview
Three rounds of interviews, all pretty easy. My first two were over the phone, the last in person. First two rounds are pretty much just you asking questions, that shows if you're prepared for the interview/position or not. The third in-person interview is them pretty much going over how their compensation package works with commission which seems dazzling along with their stunning office but if you cannot have clients at all for the first year, how are you supposed to make any commission? In the final interview I was surprised to hear a story about how the interviewer paid off the IRS to 'make them go away'.