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      Zanda Health

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      Entretiens chez Zanda HealthEntretiens d’embauche pour Brand and Content Lead chez Zanda HealthEntretien chez Zanda Health


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      Entretien pour Brand and Content Lead

      23 avr. 2026
      Candidat à l'entretien anonyme
      Aucune offre
      Expérience négative

      Autres retours d’entretien d’embauche pour un poste comme Brand and Content Lead chez Zanda Health

      Entretien pour Content and Brand Lead

      28 mai 2026
      Candidat à l'entretien anonyme
      Aucune offre
      Expérience négative
      Entretien difficile

      Candidature

      J'ai passé un entretien chez Zanda Health

      Entretien

      This was a terrible "interview" experience. Unpaid writing assignment plus 3 video responses to questions you only know at the time of the task. At no point ever interacting with a human being who actually works there. Felt dehumanizing.
      1
      Entretien difficile

      Candidature

      J'ai postulé en ligne. J'ai passé un entretien chez Zanda Health

      Entretien

      After a very reasonable CV submission process, the next step is to write a 400-600 word article for free per a vague brief that could easily be 2000 words. (None of their own blog posts are less than 1200-1500 words.) Have fun doing report-level research so you can understand a broad topic in their industry well enough to figure out which 10% of the information you can leave in while still keeping it “differentiated.” They encourage you to use AI, but I have to assume this is because they don’t know how to use AI. Setting up a content workflow that actually produces differentiated content is a lot of work. It rarely makes sense for one article—largely because you have to do all the same research you would normally do to validate outputs while building lengthy instructional and context-setting documentation for the AI. You need to create a brand style guide, develop customer persona information, define product positioning, do a competitor analysis (otherwise how do you know if something really is differentiated?), figure out what industry sources are authoritative—and all of that is just to lay the contextual groundwork so the AI understands how to frame the output. Then you need to set up a research protocol, a writing protocol, editing steps and some way to validate the article. You can get AI to produce the documentation, but you still need to validate everything yourself. Doing it properly takes at least a full day. And then you have to produce the actual article with a 50/50 chance it will still come out wrong. AI content workflows normally require a lot of feedback over several articles to get to a point where doesn't need heavy-handed edits. Apart from the assignment being poorly designed, front-loading the application process with a massive, time-consuming task is fundamentally exploitative. It exploits applicants’ desperation in an extremely competitive and uncertain job market by pressing the employer’s already-totally-imbalanced-power advantage to make them go to extraordinary lengths to give Zanda what amounts to a minor convenience. Do you really need a custom writing sample, in addition to the portfolios everyone already submitted, before you bother to speak to the candidate at all? Forcing applicants to spend days working on an unpaid assignment is crazy when they still have to go through multiple interviews and might be excluded for reasons that have nothing to do with it. It should be obvious to anyone who bothers to think about other people that large assignments should be reserved for a shortlist of 2-3 candidates at the end of the process. You asked us all to submit the task along with video responses to 3 questions. You couldn't have just split this into two steps? What happens when someone who spent 2-3 days working on a thoughtful, well-researched article fumbles on a 3-minute video response? Do you even bother to look at it? And what is even more infurating is that 3 days after I submitted it, I got an email saying the position had already been filled. Not only did they force me to complete this crazy assignment, they let me do it while they were already in late stage interviews/negotiations with final candidates. Unbelievable! It’s hard to believe that such cavalier, callous behavior is coming from a company founded by someone who was ostensibly trained as a doctor charged with protecting people’s mental health. And it becomes much grosser when you think about the collective sacrifice: only one person is getting this job! If you moved 20 people to stage 2, and each of them spent an average of two days completing the assignment (conservative estimate), the process you designed necessarily wastes more than a week of labor! How you treat people when you have the power says a lot about you. Future applicants beware.

      Questions d'entretien [3]

      Question 1

      Tell me about yourself and your goals.
      Répondre à cette question

      Question 2

      What do you like about content marketing?
      Répondre à cette question

      Question 3

      How do you use AI? What are the risks?
      Répondre à cette question
      1

      Entretien pour Content and Brand Lead

      20 avr. 2026
      Candidat à l'entretien anonyme
      Aucune offre
      Expérience négative
      Entretien difficile

      Candidature

      J'ai passé un entretien chez Zanda Health

      Entretien

      After submitting my application (which already included several sections requiring paragraph-long answers), I received an email asking me to submit a sample project. But they didn’t want something from my existing portfolio — they wanted a brand new, lengthy piece of content about their company/industry. And this was all before I had spoken to a single person or had any kind of actual interview. After spending the entire weekend working on the assignment, I was then asked to record and submit three separate videos discussing my background and skills. At this point, I still hadn’t had a real conversation with anyone, so the continued time-intensive requests started to feel a bit excessive and one-sided. Why was I doing all of this for a company that couldn’t spare 5 minutes for a phone call? Despite my hard work, I never received any confirmation that they received my project or videos. In fact, the only communication I did get was a generic rejection email about a week later (with no real feedback, of course). The entire experience felt extremely impersonal, low-effort, and like they had zero respect for my time or experience. However, I probably shouldn’t be surprised — As other reviews mention, this was labeled as a “permanent contractor” role where you are 1099ed… despite the fact that you’d be working full-time (40 hours a week), on set days and times, and with no defined end date. If they are willing to cut corners in how they classify and compensate employees, it makes sense that the hiring process would feel just as impersonal and transactional.
      1