I applied through college or university. The process took 3 weeks. I interviewed at Northrop Grumman in Jan 2015
Interview
Was contacted to come in for an in person interview. I originally applied through my university. Went in and talked mostly about my experience and some behavioral questions. They mostly talked about the role and what I would be doing.
They asked typical questions, but I had to perform an edit of a page of a "proposal" and find the errors. The interview consisted of the proposal manager, who I would be working with directly, then I was escorted to other departments to meet and interview with the heads of those departments (such as the business development lead and the head of finance)
I applied online. The process took 4 weeks. I interviewed at Northrop Grumman in Dec 2014
Interview
Too many “chefs stirring the pot” during the recruitment process. One person makes initial contact, another sets up the interview, and a third informs you of the disposition (that is, if you get informed at all). It prevents the candidate from developing even the slightest of rapports with a recruiter. This shouldn’t be the case – especially since the recruitment is done in-house.
I knew we were off to a bad start when the previous interviewee was parting ways with the hiring manager as I was being escorted in by one of her subordinates. That showed a lack of professionalism. Once we got started, she seemed unprepared and what was really shocking was her ignorance of and total lack of context for the current state of the industry – really surprising since it looks like she’s about a 10-year veteran of the company so that shouldn’t be an excuse. I came away with the impression that while this interviewer may be book smart, she was completely lacking in emotional intelligence. Case in point: one should not be referring to a tenured employee and subordinate as a “girl who works for me”. Seriously?!? Astounding that an individual so lacking in refinement and polish could be representing Northrop Grumman at any managerial level. I’ve had other interviews at NG that have gone well – this was just not one of them.