J'ai postulé via un recruteur. Le processus a pris 4 semaines. J'ai passé un entretien chez CoStar Group (Irvine, CA) en avr. 2014
Entretien
I was initially contact by in internal recruiter for CoStar. She had found me on Stackoverflow. She talked about my background, my goals, my salary, and then did a basic tech screening. Not too hard, things like ASP.NET session state.
Then I was scheduled for an onsite interview at their beautiful offices in Irvine. It was very challenging. I was asked to rate myself on my back-end, middle-tier, and front-end skills on a scale of 1-10. I played it conservative.
The hiring manager was one of the sharpest guys I've interviewed with. He could make the questions progressively harder and had some serious edge cases that I had to answer. Tough, but fair questions.
Then it came time for the front-end question. OMG! He started talking about the AMD design pattern and frameworks like Durandal - stuff that wasn't even around a year ago. A lot of SPA stuff. If you are a JS ninja, this is your place.
I met a few more developers -- all very sharp. I was called back for another round of technical interviews and started to feel optimistic. I could hold my own on basic C# and ASP.NET MVC, WCF stuff. But client-side stuff, not so much. I got word two weeks later the they needed more of a front-end person, but have numerous reqs and may consider me for a more middle tier position in the coming months.
I am seriously thinking about holding out until then, freelancing or doing something else, because they really were that good. Not your typical IT backwater.
J'ai postulé en ligne. J'ai passé un entretien chez CoStar Group
Entretien
Phone interview was easy, then had a long in person interview. The manager and senior developers I talked to were not that up to date with technology. They were using anti-patterns when they showed me their answers once I showed them mine. It felt like they were poaching my ideas that I had when showing them my way of doing things. Then the other developers interviewed me; most if not all were not very good developers from what I could gather from what questions they were asking me.