Had a recruiter contact me via LinkedIn. Found the whole process very unprofessional and took way too long. 1) none of the people who interviewed knew what I was being recruited for
2) none of the interviewers had any non-facebook experience which is generally a red flag for an experienced candidate.
3) the interviewer failed me on the technical component due to an SQL formatting issue. I told the interviewer that I would rarely look at SQL results directly and always piped them through a visualization layer.
4) the interviewer obviously thought that the interview was a waste of time.
5) at no point did anyone ask me about my experience. It was always "why" I would want to work at Facebook and "how" amazing Facebook is.
J'ai passé un entretien chez Meta (Menlo Park, CA)
Entretien
Conversation with recruiter in email. Technical screening round where they ask about SQL and product sense. Onsite-Loop with four rounds. They ask about SQL, Product Sense, Statistics, Behavioural questions. The difficulty is average.
The technical round kicked off with a design question about A/B testing for Facebook Reels, which I found engaging. Then, I tackled a SQL query on user comments and how to account for novelty effects in ongoing experiments. Thankfully, I had prepared with the company-specific questions on PracHub, and it made a real difference in my confidence. The entire process felt smooth, and after some behavioral questions, I received an offer that I happily accepted.
Questions d'entretien [3]
Question 1
Design an A/B test for a Facebook Reels ranking change and describe how you would interpret the results
Total 7 rounds: first round for resume screening, second for technical screening, then for on-site virtual with 4 interviews back to back, then hiring manager round after team matching and then salary negotiation with HR
Questions d'entretien [1]
Question 1
Meta’s evaluation rubrics focus heavily on "Product Thinking over Fancy Math". Interviewers want to see if you can operate like a product owner with an analytical mindset, navigating messy scenarios affecting billions of users