J'ai postulé en ligne. Le processus a pris 2 mois. J'ai passé un entretien chez Capital One (Tysons Corner) en févr. 2019
Entretien
First, I talked with the hiring manager about the team and role. Second, I did a data science take-home challenge. (Some may claim the process takes 4 hours, but I doubt that number is anywhere close to the empirical mean.) Then I did a full day of onsite interviews (5 I think).
I got feedback saying I did well during the interview; however, the offer was for a role below what we discussed in advance. It doesn't really matter if this was an intentional bait and switch or some sort of internal mixup -- in either case the hiring manager overpromised and underdelivered. This showed that I could not rely on the hiring manager. Based on this example and two earlier specific instances, I lost confidence in him. I recommend this: listen closely and trust your instincts.
If you are a motivated and driven software engineer, I would advice against going to work at Capital One. I know many people in my network that recommend against it. Most talented people I've known at C1 have since moved on to other places.
Look at it this way: if you are going to work for a for-profit organization in the financial services industry, they should pay competitively. C1 does not. C1 will claim they differentiate in terms of work-life balance, but such a claim is exaggerated and certainly not universal. Be sure to compare such claims against other companies you are considering -- many big companies I know aren't really that different.
There is one positive aspect about C1: use their interviews as practice. The interviewers I met were nice people. The interviews aren't particularly challenging relative to top Silicon Valley interviews, so it can be a useful experience if you have a day to spare.
Questions d'entretien [1]
Question 1
I'm not going to share the interview questions I got, because I don't think doing so is ethical. I will say that I think the questions were mostly reasonable. Study computer science, systems architecture, and machine learning. Don't forget to practice your behavioral interviews; e.g. teamwork, conflict, and so on.
Connected with a former colleague who referred me to Capital One, and it turned out to be a great fit. The initial chat was pretty straightforward, discussing my background and experience. In the technical round, I was asked to design a fraud detection model and explain concepts like the bias-variance tradeoff. Lucky for me, I had just reviewed similar questions on PracHub, which made me feel ready. After a couple of behavioral interviews, I received an offer, which I happily accepted. Overall, the process was smooth and welcoming.
Questions d'entretien [3]
Question 1
Walk me through how you would design a credit card fraud detection model end to end
J'ai postulé en ligne. J'ai passé un entretien chez Capital One (San Francisco, CA) en janv. 2026
Entretien
Online technical assessment with 4 questions. Had to screenshare and record myself so they could verify that there was nobody else in the room and that I wasn't using external resources.
Questions d'entretien [1]
Question 1
One of the questions was a stateful bit maniplulation question, You were given an input binary array and a list of commands that either
1. Converted the leftmost bit to 1
2. Turns a bit at a specified index to 0
Your goal was to execute the commands in sequence
J'ai postulé en ligne. J'ai passé un entretien chez Capital One (San Jose, CA)
Entretien
I applied after some days, got the call from recruiter then the second round was with manager discussing mostly resume, role requirements and some technical questions. Third round is with the manager and one of the team member the team member asked only technical question.