Glassdoor users rated their interview experience at Nokia as 100% positive with a difficulty rating score of 3 out of 5 (where 5 is the highest level of difficulty). Candidates interviewing for Project Officer and rated their interviews as the hardest, whereas interviews for Project Officer and roles were rated as the easiest.
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I applied online. The process took 1 day. I interviewed at Nokia (Berlin) in Apr 2010
Interview
Zunächst kontaktierte mich einer der Senior Developer per Telefon und stellte mir ein paar grundlegende Fragen über das Programmieren, Mathematik und Algorithmen, anscheinend mit dem Ziel, die Bewerber auszuschließen, die keine Ahnung haben.
Das Interview selbst bestand aus sieben ca. einstündigen Runden. Vier davon mit Developerteams, eine mit dem Leiter der Personalabteilung, eine mit einem Produktmanager und eine mit einem Entwicklungsleiter, glaube ich. Die Developerteams stellten jeweils unterschiedlich geartete Fragen, die einen legten mehr Wert auf Mathematik und fragten nach kleinen Beweisen (höheres Gymnasialmathematikniveau), andere stellten Algorithmen-Fragen (z.B. über Graphentheorie, Constraint Resolution), und andere wiederum stellten Fragen über elementare Datenstrukturen und diesbezügliche Algorithmen. Die Beantwortung der Fragen beinhaltete häufig ein wenig Programmieren in einem Pseudo-Code auf einem Blatt Papier.
Der Interviewprozess war sehr umfassend, was mir viel über die relativ hohe Qualifikation der Entwicklungsmitarbeiter verriet. Die Anzahl der Interviews war natürlich stressig, aber ich lernte so auch viele der Personen kennen, mit denen ich dann zusammengearbeitet hätte.
I applied through a recruiter. The process took 5 weeks. I interviewed at Nokia (San Diego, TX) in Feb 2012
Interview
I initially received an email from Nokia Human Resource department for an on site interview. Then I got barraged with 4-5 emails from various Nokia recruiters to fill different forms, especially the background check form. Before I had a chance to send my availability, HR scheduled an on site interview. I was on vacation and asked to be rescheduled. Nokia was interested to know if I needed work visa or help with filing for permanent residency. I had added “US CITIZEN” on my resume but no one reads resumes. I guess if the applicant is unemployed or needs visa, it works better for Nokia.
Here are the questions on one of the emails,
1 - What is your primary motivation to seek new employment?
2 - Why are you considering Nokia as your next employer?
3 - Please tell us what you bring to the table to help Nokia's business reach the next level?
4 - If an interview takes place, and an offer is extended, and you accept, when do you think you can physically start working at this location in this position?
5 - Are you eligible to work in the United States?
6 - Can you provide proof of your right to work in the U.S. within the first three working days?
7 - Do you now have, or will you at some point in the future require, visa sponsorship (e.g. TN, H1-B, L visa status)? If yes, what is your current visa type and when was it first issued?
8 - If you answered "yes" to question #7, are you currently in the Green Card Process? If yes, which stage? (This will help us determine if your case is portable)
9 - What is your current or last annual base salary (do not include bonuses)?
10 - What are your annual base salary expectations moving forward? (Do not include bonuses. At minimum, please provide a salary range)
11 - Please summarize the work experience you have or had that makes you qualified for this position?
12 - Have you or any of your previous U.S. employers received a deemed export license to employ you in the past?
On the day of interview, I was scheduled to talk to HR, then engineering and product managers, followed with a technical peer, and HR again. I spent about 20 minutes with the HR whose sole purpose was to find out about my present salary. I was expecting and looking forward to meeting with engineering/product managers, but two engineers entered… I tried to tune to their accents when they were asking questions about couple of projects on my resume. They were not prepared and scrambling to read my resume (they must have been the last minute replacements). After 30 minutes a technical peer entered who had a chip on his shoulder. At some point we disagreed about design concept/process and test procedures. Meanwhile he said that Nokia has filled all sr. design/engineering positions and are looking for lower level engineers. I was thinking, why am I here for?!! Then HR person stepped in. This time he wanted to know what type of salary they should offer me!!! This was so unconventional and backwards. Giving a salary base was like kiss of death. Definitely every company has a set salary range for each grade and position. HR was adamant to get the base salary #; he explained that Nokia did not desire to get into salary negotiating discussion (HA?!!!). I did not provide a number for salary and that was the end of my interview. Why did they waste my time with their totally illogical process and indecisiveness? Perhaps it is better not to be employed by a company that cannot properly make and negotiate an offer. This might be just one example of why Nokia is not able to compete with its competitors.