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      Colloqui di MarsColloqui per Senior Systems Engineer presso MarsColloquio di Mars


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      Colloquio per Senior Systems Engineer

      5 dic 2013
      Dipendente anonimo
      Atlanta, GA
      Offerta accettata
      Esperienza positiva
      Colloquio nella media

      Candidatura

      Ho presentato la mia candidatura tramite un'agenzia di reclutamento personale. La procedura ha richiesto 2 settimane. Ho sostenuto un colloquio presso Mars (Atlanta, GA) nel mese di ott 2013

      Colloquio

      My initial contact with Wrigley was through a recruiting/staffing agency. The agency, like other similar agencies, screened me for qualifications (education, degrees, experience, etc). Once it was determined that I was a great fit for the position at Wrigley, a phone interview was quickly set up for later in the week. My phone interview was with the Director of Engineering & Continuous Improvement. The phone interview centered around my educational background, my previous experience, skill sets, reason for looking for employment, and my overall interest in working for Wrigley. I found the dialogue to be very natural, candid, detailed oriented, informative, but, overall, relatively low stress (I am an extrovert, so what was low stress for me could be perceived as stressful for others, depending on how comfortable one is with conveying one’s strengths and skill sets over the phone). At the conclusion of the phone interview, I asked if the interviewer had any other questions, and, if not, what the next steps were. I received immediate feedback that they would like me to travel for an on-site interview. My on-site interview was the following week. I interviewed with approximately 8-10 people (2 at a time) from various functions. The overall on-site interview process was somewhat stressful because of the mixture of questions that were asked. Some questions seemed to center around one’s own agenda (they really didn’t relate to the role, and focused more around what the interviewer did in his/her role, so these questions were a bit puzzling), some focused more on behavioral type questions, and some questions were very role specific. It was a bit exhausting because each session ran into the next one, so I got very little time between interviewers to “regroup”. At the end of the interview day, I met with the hiring manager for a “close-out” meeting. I expressed interest in this position and asked what the next steps were. Their response was direct, and they stated I would know in a few days. I was contacted by my recruiting agent a couple of days later (2 to be exact) and was told an offer had been extended. At this point in time, I had a couple of other potential offers on the table and stated I needed 1-2 weeks to communicate a decision—Wrigley accepted that timeframe.

      Domande di colloquio [1]

      Domanda 1

      The most difficult question during the interview was “Tell me about a decision that had to be made where your team members didn’t see “eye-to-eye” on, and how did you handle it?”. This wasn’t a particularly difficult question to answer based on my background—I pulled from team experiences that I had led in the past, but can see how this could be a tricky question to answer (underlining purpose of this question is to determine if you have a “dictator” approach, if you tend to side with one group, or if you aim to bring your team together in the middle to find a compromising proposition).
      2 risposte
      5

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