Aller au contenuAller au pied de page
  • Emplois
  • Entreprises
  • Salaires
  • Pour les employeurs

      Boostez votre carrière

      Découvrez votre salaire potentiel, décrochez des emplois de rêve et partagez vos témoignages de manière anonyme.

      employer cover photo
      employer logo
      employer logo

      Stelligent

      Fait partie de Mphasis

      Est-ce votre entreprise ?

      À propos
      Avis
      Salaires et avantages
      Emplois
      Entretiens
      Entretiens
      Recherches associées: Avis sur Stelligent | Offres d’emploi chez Stelligent | Salaires chez Stelligent | Avantages sociaux chez Stelligent
      Entretiens chez StelligentEntretiens d’embauche pour Devops Engineer chez StelligentEntretien chez Stelligent


      Glassdoor

      • À propos
      • Récompenses
      • Blog
      • Nous contacter
      • Guides

      Employeurs

      • Compte employeur gratuit
      • Centre employeur
      • Blog pour les employeurs

      Informations

      • Aide
      • Règles de la communauté
      • Conditions d'utilisation
      • Confidentialité et choix publicitaires
      • Ne pas vendre ni partager mes informations
      • Outil de consentement aux cookies

      Travailler avec nous

      • Annonceurs
      • Carrières
      Télécharger l'application

      • Parcourir par :
      • Entreprises
      • Emplois
      • Lieux

      Copyright © 2008-2026. Glassdoor LLC. « Glassdoor », son logo, « Worklife Pro » et « Bowls » sont des marques déposées de Glassdoor LLC.

      Entreprises suivies

      Tenez-vous au courant des dernières opportunités et profitez de conseils d’initiés en suivant les entreprises de vos rêves.

      Recherche d’emplois

      Obtenez des recommandations et des mises à jour personnalisées en démarrant vos recherches.

      Entretien pour Devops Engineer

      19 juin 2018
      Candidat à l'entretien anonyme
      Remote, OR
      Offre refusée
      Expérience négative
      Entretien difficile

      Candidature

      J'ai postulé via un recruteur. Le processus a pris 3 semaines. J'ai passé un entretien chez Stelligent (Remote, OR) en avr. 2018

      Entretien

      Long. over several dispersed days. Questions session then a project that was ill-defined. then hands-on with team members via the remote screen with lots of questions about applications not listed in job rec and not listed on my resume.

      Questions d'entretien [1]

      Question 1

      Show us how you use Chef's Test Kitchen (not listed in rec no my skill set). show us how you would use sparkleformation.io (again not listed in job rec/details nor in my past skill set)
      1 réponse
      2

      Autres retours d’entretien d’embauche pour un poste comme Devops Engineer chez Stelligent

      Entretien pour Devops Engineer

      6 sept. 2019
      Candidat à l'entretien anonyme
      Seattle, WA
      Aucune offre
      Expérience négative
      Entretien facile

      Candidature

      J'ai postulé via un recruteur. Le processus a pris 4 semaines. J'ai passé un entretien chez Stelligent (Seattle, WA) en août 2019

      Entretien

      The first stage is filling out a Google Forms questionnaire. Most of the questionnaire is just duplicating items from your resume/LinkedIn. There is a large text box in which you must describe CI/CD in depth. The next stage is an "interview"; however, it's really just an HR representative "selling" the company to you. They asked a few basic questions, such as whether I would be comfortable with 25% or more travel. The third stage was a one-on-one screen-sharing session in which I reviewed a snippet of code in a language of my choice. There were no "tricky" aspects to the "code review"; there were numerous obvious errors and deviations from best practices. Any candidate with at least a year of real-world usage of a given language should have no issues with this "code review" exercise. After the "code review" portion, the interviewer asked basic questions about CI/CD and general technical project management. The questions were all "softball"; if you use some kind of version control and some kind of CI/CD pipeline, you should pass easily. The fourth stage is a "mini project". You are given an empty Stelligent-owned GitHub repo, along with a PDF describing the project requirements. The requirements are basically "create a toy web app that responds to GET requests with the following message", combined with "include tests" and "automate everything (some prerequisites are OK; just call them out)". You are given a week or more to complete the project, but I was able to complete it over a weekend. Having a complete and robust project that fully covers all of the requirements is more important than completing the project quickly. There is no direct feedback at this stage. The final stage is presentation and review of the "mini project". The audience is a panel. Of the panel members, one was silent, one asked a single question when prompted by the "leader", and the final member was effectively the only active participant. All of the panel members aside from the "leader" seemed disconnected; if you have been in a remote meeting in which some participants are coding instead of paying attention to the meeting, you know the feeling. The panel gave no agenda; the "leader" jumped into "OK, explain the project" after introductions were made. At several points in the presentation, the panel "leader" asked questions to which my README already had the answers. Most of the questions were repeats of the "softball" questions about basic CI/CD concepts from the "code review" stage. The questions targeted at the mini-project specifically were mostly typical "why $THING? What could you use instead of $THING?"; for example, deployment using Terraform versus CloudFormation. The "leader" expressed disappointment that there were any prerequisites (in my case, having the AWS CLI, credentials, and optionally a Role / profile to deploy the application), as opposed to a literal "one-click" deployment. At all the other stages, feedback was either immediate or came back within about 24 hours. At the final stage, I did not receive feedback until three days had passed. I had submitted the mini-project about two weeks before the panel returned their feedback via my recruiter. The final feedback was completely negative, and downright shocking. The panel concluded that I "did not have a devops skillset", "failed to automate the deployment", and was generally "inexperienced with implementing automated solutions on AWS". I have been a systems and devops engineer for about a decade, including **at AWS**. I have years of experience creating and managing complex CI/CD pipelines at a literally global scale (e.g., for Kiva aka Amazon Robotics worldwide), writing full end-to-end test suites for Amazon Fulfillment and AWS edge services, etc. Finally, my project utilized Elastic Beanstalk such that the only requisite commands were an "eb init" and "eb deploy". I state all of these things not as a whinging "how dare they not give me an offer", but to give some context as to why the brutally negative feedback at the final stage was so utterly confusing and unexpected. Unfortunately, there was no elucidating feedback about any specific deficiency. There were practically no actual technical questions. The majority of the questions were very "general", and boiled down to "describe conceptually CI/CD, pipelines, rollbacks, version control, and other basic day to day concepts". I would describe the interview questions in general as "easy". The "code review" and "mini-project" aspects were the only technical aspects of the interview process. Even then, any half-decent engineer with some programming experience should pass both of those challenges with minimal effort. Overall, I came away with the impression that a solid engineer could easily fail the final stage for arbitrary and mysterious reasons, while an unqualified or under-qualified individual could just as easily pass if they "clicked" with the panel.

      Questions d'entretien [5]

      Question 1

      Why use Elastic Beanstalk instead of CloudFormation?
      1 réponse

      Question 2

      Are there tests?
      1 réponse

      Question 3

      Why is this application taking so long to deploy?
      1 réponse

      Question 4

      How do you deploy different git branches to different stages?
      1 réponse

      Question 5

      Doesn't EB limit you, as it is an "opinionated" tool?
      1 réponse
      9

      Entretien pour Devops Engineer

      28 oct. 2018
      Candidat à l'entretien anonyme
      Aucune offre
      Expérience négative
      Entretien difficile

      Candidature

      J'ai postulé via une agence de recrutement. Le processus a pris 3 semaines. J'ai passé un entretien chez Stelligent en oct. 2018

      Entretien

      Initial phone screen, take home project, presentation. Although I did not get an offer, I learned quite a bit about during the interview process. The reason I don't recommend Stelligent isn't that I didn't get an offer. The management present on the final presentation were seemingly the 'smartest guys in the room'. And they were looking for perfection from their candidates. For the amount of time I spent on the interviewing including preparation, take home, etc they were far too particular for a company needing staff to serve their customers. Oh and they refer to their staff as 'Stelligencia" which I find amusing.

      Questions d'entretien [3]

      Question 1

      How do you perform testing - unit, acceptance, etc?
      Répondre à cette question

      Question 2

      How do you manage promotion of build artifacts from one AWS account to another when using a CI/CD tool such as Jenkins?
      Répondre à cette question

      Question 3

      How do you manage production deployments for a serverless application? What are some of the implications ?
      Répondre à cette question
      2
      avatar
      Réponse de Stelligent
      7y
      Glad to hear you were able to learn from the interview! We will review your comments with the interview team and see how we can improve the experience and interactions.