I applied online. I interviewed at ServiceTitan in Feb 2021
Interview
First interview with recruiter at the company, general discussion
next 2 interviews are all coding, 3rd is a conversation w/ the director
I learned:
Their server side is c# .net
On frontend they utilize react and es6
Tribe/squad model for hierarchy
Agile & Code reviews
Unlimited PTO
Kind of set up your own hours
Company was described as fast moving company -> # 11 in cloud technologies / untapped market
The position I was interviewing for was suppose to be 6 months up front solo working with Cloud Elements to help integrate a new acquisition or something. After that you could transition into a team working on one of their web applications
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
The coding interviews are around async programming utilizing promises w/ basic javascript
I applied online. The process took 1 day. I interviewed at ServiceTitan (Phoenix, AZ) in Jan 2021
Interview
Recruiter was great. Great conversation. Coding interview was interesting. Nothing algorithmic, just custom implementation. No real questions on thought process to get to result. Had some issues with the platform which even the interviewer even raised concern about. Interviewer raised one concern but I immediately answered what the better option would be. Had to request for feedback but seemingly was passed over without any real reasons.
I applied through a recruiter. I interviewed at ServiceTitan
Interview
2 codeshare interviews, then a virtual on-site.
My coding interviews with ServiceTitan were not conducted in the typical FAANG-style. The interviewers did not want me to explain my approach or thought process, or really interact with me much at all. They were more like test proctors. "Read the problem. You have 1 hour. Let me know if you have questions."
If you fail you will be ghosted. ServiceTitan does not send rejection emails or notify you in any way.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
The problems did not involve tricky algorithms but rather very pragmatic C# tasks that are uncommon for most developers. Study C#, not algorithms.