I applied through college or university. I interviewed at Intuit (San Francisco, CA) in Aug 2020
Interview
Three interviews last one required a case study. All conducts by internal Product manager team. First round one interviewer second round two interviewers and third round two senior product manager interviewers.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Tell us about yourself (knowing they ask it and you need to show case some work)
Very bad experience with Intuit. Won't recommend anyone. There was no structure and they wasted time.
I was asked to take part in a hacktaton challenge. Their platform crashed several times. However despite of that I qualified and was told my interview would be scheduled next week. I tried to contact HR, no response.
After a month, they contacted me saying they are sending me a test and if get the qualification score, they would schedule the interview. I asked HR about the hackaton, She said she has no idea and may be that is not valid anyone.
Really? You guys wasted a day and now that's not valid in your eyes.
Interview:
Round 1: Tech interview was easy. I was given a medium and hard leetcode problem.
Round 2: Craft demo.
I was asked to prepare a presentation on my project but guess what that round didn't happen. When I asked HR, she said we don't do that. Wasted my time again
Round 3: I was asked basic oops questions. The kind of questions you expect from Fresher. I have 5+ years of experience.
Round 4: Hiring manager round
The end.
It was totally a waste of time.
I applied online. The process took 2 weeks. I interviewed at Intuit (Atlanta, GA) in Jan 2022
Interview
There was no initial phone screening.
I was scheduled for a panel interview (4 people). During the interview, they ask questions in a relay type of way. One-by-one they will ask questions and give you a chance to answer. All of the questions will be your typical interview questions; besides maybe 1 or 2. The interview feels like you are being bombarded, not very personal.
When it was my turn to ask questions one individual failed to answer the question and only agreed with the others, sort of in a dismissive natural; although the question was a personal experience question.
When I asked a question about training I stated, "So, at the end of training we should be experts?" Which then I received a firm sort-of condescending reply saying, "No, you're not an expert/won't be an expert, top executives are experts". Interesting choice of a reply. I guess mediocre is best.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Literally google "most common interview questions" and practice your answers from there.