The role was cancelled after 4 rounds of interviews across 3 months, a complex case study on a real business issue with a final panel presentation to 6 people. I was ultimately notified that Usercentrics had shifted priorities and decided to pause hiring and close the role.
This was, without question, one of the most frustrating and disappointing interview processes Iâve experienced. From the beginning, expectations were mismanaged. In my first conversation with the recruiter in December, I was told the process would conclude within two weeks, before Christmas. Instead, it stretched to three months with little communication or accountability for delays.
Despite progressing successfully through all rounds, I was asked to complete an extremely detailed case study based on a real business problem. The scope went far beyond what is reasonable for an interview: full diagnostic analysis using data and feedback, a comprehensive enablement strategy, clearly defined initiatives, cross-functional alignment, KPIs, measurement frameworks, and a delivery timeline. This was not a simple assessment of thinking or approach, it felt indistinguishable from unpaid consulting work.
The final panel presentation reinforced the lack of professionalism. The attendee list was not shared in advance, making it difficult to prepare appropriately. More concerning, the CCO joined late without acknowledgment, forcing me to restart part of the presentation. For a senior-level hiring process, this reflects poorly on leadership and respect for candidatesâ time. Questions were deeply rooted in the companyâs internal structure and data, making it difficult for an external candidate to provide meaningful or accurate answers without access to that context.
After all of this investment, the process ended with the role being cancelled, after multiple follow ups, due to âshifting priorities.â This clearly indicates a lack of internal alignment and planning. The worst part is how they make candidates waste their time and also it raises legitimate concerns about whether the extensive case study was used to extract external ideas without a real commitment to hiring. đ©
The initial salary range shared was below market standards, and expectations around working outside normal hours were positioned as standard due to the company being a âfast-growing startup.â