I completed three rounds of interviews with BioScience, each one seemingly designed to test not only my professional abilities but also my flexibility, patience, and telepathic skills.
The first interview arrived as a complete surprise — a spontaneous phone call from a junior HR representative right in the middle of my workday, with no prior notice or scheduling. I can only assume this is part of their unique approach to assessing how candidates handle chaos. Fortunately, I managed to adapt quickly, and the discussion concluded positively.
The second interview came about a week later, scheduled a mere day in advance. This time I spoke with a senior HR representative, who — perhaps for consistency — asked almost exactly the same questions as the first one. Again, everything seemed positive, followed by several weeks of radio silence, presumably to build suspense.
Then came the third interview, once again announced the day before and, of course, conducted during working hours. This time, I spoke with the Medical Director. I had done my research and came well-prepared, which may have been a bit too thorough, as she appeared slightly startled by how much I had learned about her background within a single day. We actually shared very similar qualifications, education, and professional experience — though my stronger regional network and broader skill set may have unintentionally overqualified me for the comfort level of the panel. The discussion was cordial, and I was told the next step would be a project-based final round.
After that, the company disappeared faster than a clinical trial with bad data. No feedback, no response to emails, no returned calls — just complete silence. Then, months later (yes, months, not weeks), a short and cheerful “Good morning” email arrived to inform me that I had been rejected. The lack of effort to even match the salutation with the message content was oddly fitting — a poetic ending to an already disorganized process.
Overall, while each conversation itself was pleasant, the entire experience reflected a remarkable lack of coordination, transparency, and basic respect for candidates’ time. For a company operating in the field of “BioScience,” one might expect a more structured and evidence-based approach to recruitment.