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      Entretien pour Software QA Engineer/Tester

      28 août 2017
      Candidat à l'entretien anonyme
      Chicago, IL
      Aucune offre
      Expérience négative
      Entretien facile

      Candidature

      J'ai postulé en ligne. J'ai passé un entretien chez RedShelf (Chicago, IL) en août 2017

      Entretien

      Initial discussions took place with the internal recruiter. All were very positive, quite friendly, extremely responsive. This was followed by an on-site interview with some members of the team, including the CTO. Here the process was quite well done. I got a great feel for the business, its challenges, and how people felt the business had to position itself to remain competitive. Ultimately I wasn't made an offer and I do understand their reason, but not their rationale. I didn't want to rate my "overall experience" as negative but "no opinion" seemed a little inaccurate. So I would like to explain that a little bit because again while I have no problem with the reason, it was the rationale that I found concerning after I had time to reflect on the interview. Another reviewer, for a different role entirely, had said they felt they were refining their candidate interview process and I think that's certainly true for the QA and testing roles. My biggest concern is that the issues they _thought_ they had with me ("Would he be too strategic at the expense of being tactical?") were never actually put to the test. In other words, I was never really given a chance to mitigate those concerns. And that was a bit off-putting because the role, during the interview, was very much intimated as more of a strategic role but with a specific tactical focus of working with the business to craft acceptance and scenarios. Something that I have massive numbers of blog posts on and could have talked about in detail -- had I been asked. So there was just the assumption made about my approach without actually presenting, say, a tactical challenge for me. (Example: "Let's talk about how you would test our functionality. What tests would you write? How would you work with business to write these?") Nor was I even allowed to address the concern; which would be okay, except for the fact that I was told multiple times during the interview that they weren't really sure exactly how to interview for this role. I was also repeatedly asked what my "philosophy" was on one thing or another (TDD, QA, developers as testers, etc). Yet "too much philosophy" was ultimately what I got dinged on. But, again, the experience overall was very positive. And I was contacted and given reasons why I would not be move forward in the process. And that matters! Many companies don't do that anymore and I was appreciative of this effort on the part of the company.

      Questions d'entretien [1]

      Question 1

      "What is your philosophy of QA?"
      1 réponse
      1