Aller au contenuAller au pied de page
  • Emplois
  • Entreprises
  • Salaires
  • Pour les employeurs

      Boostez votre carrière

      Découvrez votre salaire potentiel, décrochez des emplois de rêve et partagez vos témoignages de manière anonyme.

      employer cover photo
      employer logo
      employer logo

      Adfactors PR

      Est-ce votre entreprise ?

      À propos
      Avis
      Salaires et avantages
      Emplois
      Entretiens
      Entretiens
      Recherches associées: Avis sur Adfactors PR | Offres d’emploi chez Adfactors PR | Salaires chez Adfactors PR | Avantages sociaux chez Adfactors PR
      Entretiens chez Adfactors PREntretiens d’embauche pour Anonymous chez Adfactors PREntretien chez Adfactors PR


      Glassdoor

      • À propos
      • Récompenses
      • Blog
      • Nous contacter
      • Guides

      Employeurs

      • Compte employeur gratuit
      • Centre employeur
      • Blog pour les employeurs

      Informations

      • Aide
      • Règles de la communauté
      • Conditions d'utilisation
      • Confidentialité et choix publicitaires
      • Ne pas vendre ni partager mes informations
      • Outil de consentement aux cookies

      Travailler avec nous

      • Annonceurs
      • Carrières
      Télécharger l'application

      • Parcourir par :
      • Entreprises
      • Emplois
      • Lieux

      Copyright © 2008-2026. Glassdoor LLC. « Glassdoor », son logo, « Worklife Pro » et « Bowls » sont des marques déposées de Glassdoor LLC.

      Entreprises suivies

      Tenez-vous au courant des dernières opportunités et profitez de conseils d’initiés en suivant les entreprises de vos rêves.

      Recherche d’emplois

      Obtenez des recommandations et des mises à jour personnalisées en démarrant vos recherches.

      Entretien pour Anonymous

      4 mars 2026
      Candidat à l'entretien anonyme
      Aucune offre
      Expérience négative
      Entretien moyen

      Candidature

      J'ai passé un entretien chez Adfactors PR

      Entretien

      I was approached by HR on LinkedIn for this role, and the initial round was relevant and well-structured. It focused on my industry experience, previous work, and expectations from the position, exactly what an interview should do. The next step was a detailed copy test with a strict two-day deadline. The expectations were clearly communicated, and I completed and submitted the assignment within the timeline. At this stage, the process felt fair. The experience began to deteriorate during the in-office HR round. Instead of discussing cultural alignment or role expectations, the conversation fixated almost entirely on my “job stability.” Despite having spent over 2–2.5 years in previous roles (which is common in ad agency environments), I was repeatedly questioned about my switches. The tone felt less like a discussion and more like a cross-examination. There was a visible emphasis on longevity within one organization, seemingly positioned as a moral benchmark rather than a professional choice. The questioning drifted into areas unrelated to the role, and the conversation at times felt dismissive. Adding “no offence” after an uncomfortable line of questioning does little to offset the impact. The final round with the MD continued this pattern. The discussion leaned heavily toward testing knowledge of very specific news items, with a tone that felt more interrogative than conversational. In the beginning, I was asked a caste-based question, something that should have no place in a professional interview. That was particularly disappointing. It was also surprising to see certain topics of global news being dismissed as “gossip,” while simultaneously being used as a benchmark to assess awareness. After completing four rounds, I received no communication from HR. For an organization that emphasizes structure and process, the complete lack of closure was telling. Even a brief rejection email would have reflected basic professionalism. The process is undoubtedly intensive. However, rigor should not come at the cost of relevance, respect, or basic candidate courtesy. Interviews should evaluate skills and fit — not attempt to diminish candidates for not fitting a narrow definition of “stability” or for not matching someone else’s preferred news diet.

      Questions d'entretien [1]

      Question 1

      They will ask a lot of current affairs questions, given it is a PR firm. But, it can be a bit intense so prepare accordingly. The questions can be super vague to highly relevant, depending on who is interviewing you.
      Répondre à cette question
      1