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      Entretiens chez FlixsterEntretiens d’embauche pour Software Engineer chez FlixsterEntretien chez Flixster


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      Entretien pour Software Engineer

      2 févr. 2013
      Candidat à l'entretien anonyme
      Offre refusée
      Expérience positive
      Entretien difficile

      Candidature

      J'ai postulé via un recruteur. Le processus a pris 1 semaine. J'ai passé un entretien chez Flixster en janv. 2013

      Entretien

      I was contacted through my StackOverflow Careers account by Flixster's head recruiter, and we set up an initial phone screen interview. During the phone screen I was asked a couple basic questions about my experience, and was told a bit about the company and interview process. Flixster has a bit of an involved process, with a phone screen, technical test/project over email, an inperson technical interview with multiple managers, and then another inperson interview with product managers and head engineers. After passing the phone screen and email project, I was asked to come in for a technical interview. I was applying for a mobile development position, and was interviewed by the Android manager, iOS manager, web manager, and the lead recruiter I had talked to previously over the phone. Each asked me to describe my experience on my resume, and then asked me a variety of questions. I was asked things related to UI layout and design, puzzle questions, technical/whiteboarding questions, and describing how I solved problems in my previous projects. Each interviewer was very nice and intelligent, and made the interview process very easygoing. The questions they asked were a good challenge but not impossible, and they were very responsive to talking about the problem and bouncing your ideas off them. I had a lot of fun during the whole process and felt very positive about the whole day. The entire process took about 4 hours. After passing the technical interview day, I was invited back for their second round. This consisted of me meeting a couple of the iOS team members, and they quizzed me a bit more on iOS/Objective-C specific questions. After that, I met with several product managers and the VP of Engineering (I believe was his title). They mostly asked me puzzle questions or asking how I dealt with the development cycle/working with product managers. I got the sense that this second round was very much a 'cultural fit' type of interview, and seeing if my mentality fit with what they were looking for in a candidate. I really enjoyed meeting with everyone that day, and it really showed that everyone at Flixster is very intelligent and self motivated.

      Questions d'entretien [1]

      Question 1

      I was asked many challenging questions, but none were impossible and I was able to answer all of them in about 15-20 minutes. They asked me not to post any of the questions here and I'm going to respect that, and will just say that if you are solid in your CS theory and know how to communicate in an interview environment you will do fine.
      Répondre à cette question
      1

      Autres retours d’entretien d’embauche pour un poste comme Software Engineer chez Flixster

      Entretien pour Software Engineer

      18 déc. 2012
      Candidat à l'entretien anonyme
      San Francisco, CA
      Aucune offre
      Expérience neutre
      Entretien difficile

      Candidature

      J'ai postulé via un recruteur. Le processus a pris 1 jour. J'ai passé un entretien chez Flixster (San Francisco, CA) en déc. 2012

      Entretien

      Flixster, also known as the people behind the Rotten Tomatoes web site, is a start-up-style company which is actually backed by the considerably larger (and financially stable) Warner Brothers studio. The Flixster recruiter sourced me via my usually quiet & under-noticed careers.stackoverflow.com profile, which was a nice change of pace from usually getting pushed into interviews I don't want to do via pushy headhunters. The company is based on the border of SOMA and Potrero Hill, on Utah Street close to 15th avenue. It's on the fourth floor of a heavily remodeled warehouse-type building. The working space are all tables (no cubes and certainly no offices for regular employees from what I could see) and there looks like there's a bit of room available to grow within the space that they currently have (the company comprises of about 50 employees). There's a big kitchen area by the entrance with a bunch of snacks and a cooler (with just a couple different kinds of soft drinks in there; it may have been I arrived on a day when it wasn't well stocked). In terms of the demographic, everybody seems to be well under the age of 35. Bay Area tech interviews generally fall into two categories: either they examine and ask questions directly relating to the candidate's background and history, or the candidate gets interrogated on their general knowledge of computer science concepts (i.e. algorithms & data structures). Unfortunately Flixster subscribes to the latter approach, at least for the first round of a typical two round on-site interview. The role I was interviewing for was as a mobile software engineer. The first guy I spoke with was a product manager, and he was the only one who had actually taken the time to look at my resume before arriving and he asked questions about my approaches to different development scenarios. The second guy was a front end web guy. His technical question was probably the most time consuming, but he seemed to (grudgingly) accept the algorithms I attempted to draw out. The third guy was a mobile software engineer who kept the friendly banter to a minimum and tried to blast me with a couple algorithm questions (which I've copied down below). Judging from his reactions, I'm guessing he will be the strongest thumbs down against me coming on board to work with the team. In terms of the technical questions, nobody asked me a single darned thing that actually reflected my specialty or background or the potential work I would be doing: the questions were all algorithms. In other words, the kind of candidate your Flixster engineer co-workers are looking for would be a recent computer science grad with an emphasis on algorithms & data structures. The last person I spoke with was the recruiter who sourced me, who was incredibly friendly and all smiles. She apologized for not giving me a proper heads-up on the Flixster style of interviewing (but then again, that's why I was taking notes, to report back here on GlassDoor :-). Out of all the people I spoke with, I was actually very happy with her friendliness -- the week prior to my on-site interview, she invited me to attend Flixster's private screening of a blockbuster film that was opening the next day, and as I departed she gave me an (authentic) movie poster from that screening, which i was really touched and impressed by. It's a pity that I did't pass the first round, but hopefully my experience flunking the interview will help you to pass yours. If my interview notes helped you out, please let me know by voting "yes" on the "Helpful?" question below.

      Questions d'entretien [3]

      Question 1

      Design a function that simply states "YES" or "NO" whether it is possible to get from one word to another word following these three rules ( 1. insert a single character, 2. delete a single character or 3. replace a single character), where each intermediate step needs to be a word that's found in the dictionary. In other words, given a word "truck", is it possible to get to "race"? And in this particular case, yes it is… I can go from "truck" to "track" to "rack" and then lastly to "race". Whereas, it might be impossible to find a path to get from the word "Hazzard" to the word "Duke".
      1 réponse

      Question 2

      Given an array of events (where each event has a start time and an end time), describe an algorithm that allows one to determine if any single event in that array conflicts with any other event in the array.
      2 réponse(s)

      Question 3

      Given a line of five mouse holes, e.g.: O-O-O-O-O A mouse can be in any one hole at any one time. A cat can put his/her paw in one hole at any one time. The mouse changes position each time the cat removes his/her paw. Design an algorithm that guarantees the mouse will be caught.
      1 réponse
      5

      Entretien pour Software Engineer

      3 janv. 2013
      Candidat à l'entretien anonyme
      San Francisco, CA
      Offre refusée
      Expérience neutre
      Entretien moyen

      Candidature

      J'ai postulé en ligne. Le processus a pris 2 jours. J'ai passé un entretien chez Flixster (San Francisco, CA) en sept. 2012

      Entretien

      I applied online and was contacted by the HR team. I had a brief telephonic call with HR to talk about current positions, jobs etc. In a days time, I was informed to come on site for the interview. This was very strange as companies typically call on site after 1-2 rounds of telephonic screening. There was no NDA either!! The on site was broken down into 2 days: 3 on day one and 3 on day two. I was less than impressed with the interview process. Except for 2 rounds of interviews, all of them asked me puzzles or extremely simple questions. In general, interviews can be classified into two groups: extremely algorithms and data structures oriented or background and skillset oriented. This was puzzles based. Puzzles are no measure of anybody's technical skillset and added to that, it was very hard for me to judge the team with puzzles. Additionally, some "key" people heavy emphasized on university and degree. Even when I was made the offer, I was told about my school and that its a competing offer.

      Questions d'entretien [1]

      Question 1

      Some of them have already been discussed by other reviewers.
      Répondre à cette question

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