The interview process at Texas Instruments (TI) is rigorous and technical, often distinguishing clearly between Hardware/Electrical Engineering roles and Software/Embedded roles. The process typically takes 2–4 weeks from application to offer.
1. The Interview Loop Overview
Stage 1: Application & Online Assessment:
After applying, you may receive an online test (HackerRank or similar).
Content: Aptitude (logical reasoning, math) and technical sections relevant to your role (e.g., circuit analysis for EE, coding problems for CS).
Stage 2: Phone/Screening Interview (30-45 mins):
Usually with a recruiter or hiring manager.
Focus: Resume walkthrough, interest in TI, and basic technical "sanity check" questions (e.g., "What is a low-pass filter?").
Stage 3: Technical Interviews (2-3 Rounds):
These are deep dives into your domain knowledge.
Format: Virtual (WebEx/Teams) or On-site. You may be asked to share your screen to solve coding problems or draw circuits.
Presentation (Common for Full-Time): For many engineering roles, you may be asked to prepare a 15-20 minute technical presentation on a past project. You will present this to a panel who will grill you on your design choices, trade-offs, and results.
Stage 4: Behavioral/Fit Interview:
Often combined with technical rounds or held as a separate final round.
Focus: TI’s values, collaboration, and problem-solving style.