Ho presentato la mia candidatura online. La procedura ha richiesto 2 settimane. Ho sostenuto un colloquio presso Displayr (Sydney) nel mese di feb 2026
Colloquio
The first interview was with Human Resources and asked some questions regarding my career and past experiences. The first interview with Human Resources also included a technical part that asked React and JS fundamentals. They also asked if we had some knowledge about the company.
Ho presentato la mia candidatura tramite un'altra fonte. Ho sostenuto un colloquio presso Displayr (Pyrmont) nel mese di apr 2025
Colloquio
Displayr reached out to me directly via LinkedIn, which already suggests a bit of urgency to fill this position — especially since it's the only remote role currently open. But what followed wasn’t an interview. It was a funnel disguised as opportunity, a bait-and-switch where the word “interview” masked what was essentially Leetcode-by-proxy over Zoom.
The session was led by a junior developer — maybe three years in — who acted more like a Twitch streamer than a technical peer. He was clearly rushing, typing my answers live into some backend form while I explained concepts, nodding occasionally like he was just waiting to hit submit. It felt like a gamer doing speed QA, not a hiring process for a senior role.
There were no meaningful discussions about systems, architecture, leadership, or real-world delivery — just disconnected trivia and checklist logic. It was gatekeeping in disguise, and completely mismatched for the experience they claimed to be seeking.
If you're a senior engineer and can stomach this kind of disrespect cloaked as efficiency, then by all means, go ahead. Just know you're walking into a process that confuses signals with substance — and is more concerned with ticking boxes than having a real conversation.