Overall stages
Application and resume review: You submit your application, and HR or a recruiter screens your resume for basic fit (skills, experience, location, salary range). Only a subset of applicants are advanced to interviews.
Recruiter/HR screen: A 15–30 minute phone or video call to verify qualifications, clarify your background, discuss compensation, and confirm mutual interest in the role.
Main interview rounds
Technical or role-specific interviews: One or more interviews where you solve problems, walk through past projects, or discuss domain topics (e.g., coding, system design, cybersecurity tools and scenarios).
Behavioral interviews: Sessions focused on communication, teamwork, conflict, leadership, and culture fit, often using STAR-style questions about past experiences.
Onsite or final round
Panel/onsite loop: Several back-to-back interviews (often 4–6) with different team members or managers, mixing technical and behavioral questions and sometimes including an informal lunch or coffee chat that still counts toward evaluation.
Q&A and wrap-up: Near the end of each interview, you ask your questions, then the interviewer explains next steps and decision timelines before closing the conversation.
Decision and offer
Hiring review: Interviewers submit written feedback; a hiring manager or committee reviews your performance, strengths, and concerns and compares you with other candidates.
Offer, references, and background checks: If selected, you receive an offer with compensation details, often followed by reference and background checks before a final start date is confirmed.
If you tell which role or company you mean (e.g., CrowdStrike security engineer, FAANG, startup), a more tailored breakdown of that specific interview process can be provided.
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