I applied online and was contacted by a recruiter within a week. She was warm, communicative, and clearly cared about finding the right fit. Unfortunately, the rest of the process didn’t live up to that first impression.
The second interview was with a leader on the CS team who spent most of our allotted 30 minutes talking about himself, the challenges of the role, and complexity of the product. He really only asked me one question, a random riddle about buckets of water “to learn how I think," which felt misplaced for a Customer Success role. He also came across as a bit condescending and not particularly personable, which was surprising for someone who supposedly works directly with customers and customer-facing teams.
The panel interview was more structured but still odd. I was asked to build and present a hypothetical customer presentation to two managers, neither of whom actually work directly in Customer Success. While the presentation itself went smoothly, it was strange that no one from the CS team was included to evaluate how I communicate value to customers, which is a core part of the job.
The final step was another interview with another manager, again, not someone directly managing the CS organization, but an adjacent team. The conversation was fine, but at that point the entire process felt disconnected and misaligned with the role I was actually applying for.
Red Flags:
After completing the entire multi-step process, plus several hours of researching their product and building a presentation, I received a generic rejection email, no call, no feedback, nothing. That felt dismissive and unprofessional, especially after the significant time spent on my end.
Another major red flag was the complete lack of diversity. Every person I met with, aside from the recruiter, was a white male, and only one out of the five people I spoke with were part of the Customer Success team. It gave off a strong “boys’ club” energy and didn’t inspire confidence in the company’s culture or inclusivity.
Takeaway:
The recruiter was excellent at first, but everything after that felt disorganized and out of touch with what a CSM role actually entails. The process seemed more about checking boxes than genuinely evaluating fit or experience. If you value diversity, structure, and professional communication, this may not be the most encouraging place to interview.