Ho presentato la mia candidatura tramite l'università. La procedura ha richiesto 3 settimane. Ho sostenuto un colloquio presso Alarm.com (Vienna, VA) nel mese di set 2013
Colloquio
I applied through my university's job portal. Alarm.com saw my resume and gave me a call in early September 2013. The caller was friendly; we talked about my resume, my experiences, and they asked me some behavioral questions.
Then, Alarm offered me an on-site interview a week later. They paid for my flight and the hotel. However, my plane was delayed about 3 hours and I ended up in an airport an hour away in Baltimore. Ended up taking a taxi to DC with two others and then to Vienna alone. Due to an address mix-up, didn't get to my hotel until 2 am. Luckily I woke up for my 9 am interview.
I went to the waiting room first where I waited with 3 other candidates. I ended up going through the interview process with 2 of the candidates (we interviewed separately at the same time).
The on-site interview consisted of a series of one-person interviews. In order:
-A lead device engineer talked to me about my resume and asked me a brainteaser
-Another lead device engineer gave me a PCB and asked me to identify all the components on it. In addition, he asked me to identify common acronyms used in microcontroller and embedded programming (SPI, I2C, UART, etc.)
-A sheet with some basic coding questions
-Lunch with some employees and the two candidates. We had good conversation.
-An engineer interviewed me and asked me a C coding question with bit-shifting
-The CTO interviewed me and we talked about why I wanted to join Alarm.com, etc.
I had a great experience with the interview process. Everyone was very friendly and enthustiastic about their work. The engineers are all young; most of them have been out of college for a year. The culture is like that of a start-up, but Alarm.com has been around for 10 years and has carved out an established niche for the market that it's in.
Domande di colloquio [1]
Domanda 1
The bit-shifting problem had me thinking for a while, but I got it with some prodding.
La procedura ha richiesto 3 settimane. Ho sostenuto un colloquio presso Alarm.com nel mese di mar 2020
Colloquio
Contacted by recruiter, initially set up short phone call (~15 minutes). Did a hackerrank challenge, after that, scheduled a phone interview with the manager (~1 hour). Was told I would hear back from them very soon, and I never heard from them again.
Domande di colloquio [1]
Domanda 1
Basic algorithms, questions about hardware and software from a high level. Nothing too specific at the stage I got to.
Ho presentato la mia candidatura online. Ho sostenuto un colloquio presso Alarm.com (Boston, MA) nel mese di gen 2020
Colloquio
A recruiter reached out to me for a phone interview 1.5 months after I submitted my application.
The phone screen consisted of logistical and behavioral questions. The Interviewer started to rush the interview towards the end. The interviewer informed me that I would hear back within a week. The phone screen ended in 15 minutes.
I got a rejection email 5 days after the phone screen.
Domande di colloquio [1]
Domanda 1
Willing to relocate? authorized to work in US?
What do you know about the company?
Why did you choose this position?
What is something you learned recently from job/school?
Tell me about one of your most recent projects.
Any questions for the interviewer?
Ho presentato la mia candidatura online. La procedura ha richiesto 3 settimane. Ho sostenuto un colloquio presso Alarm.com (Tysons Corner, VA) nel mese di ott 2019
Colloquio
ADC (alarm.com) was always very quick to reply and the entire process from application to offer took just under a month. Everyone who interviewed me was kind and courteous -- it was a great experience!
The 'interview' was a 3 stage process:
1) Basic phone screen
2) Online code challenge
3) All day on-site
Domande di colloquio [1]
Domanda 1
Basic screen was a mix of behavioral and high level questions about technical knowledge. This was followed by an online code challenge which was some leetcode easy / medium level questions. Finally, the onsite ran the gamut from hardware to behavioral to software design questions depending on the interviewer.