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      Engineering Manager Interview

      16 Feb 2012
      Anonymous employee
      Seattle, WA
      Accepted offer
      Positive experience
      Difficult interview

      Application

      The process took 1 day. I interviewed at Amazon (Seattle, WA) in Feb 2012

      Interview

      I interviewed for a technical engineering manager position at Amazon. Overall, my experience was very positive. The interview was challenging but fair. I won't divulge any specifics, but hopefully this review can give you enough of an impression of the interview experience to decide whether this position would be worth pursuing. * The interviewers' areas of coverage areas were well divided. I met with folks from various roles, and they split up responsibilities so there was minimal redundancy in what I was asked. I was able to share about experiences in any number of different areas, which felt appropriate (versus some interviews I've been to that either focus entirely on technical, or personnel, aspects). Be prepared to talk about every aspect of your role and background. * Many questions started off fairly typically with the kind of basic questions that every candidate should be prepared to answer, but I was impressed by the way the interviewers dug into my answers with followup questions. Don't expect to just rattle off some pat answers that you read from a book or website, and don't expect to be able to BS by saying what you think they want to hear; interviewers will drill pretty deeply to get an authentic impression. * I didn't get the sense that interviewers were looking for a particular "right" answer to any question. Although it's often tempting to just say, "I did/didn't get an offer because I did/didn't give the one answer they were looking for", I moreso got the impression that interviewers were looking for good justification and clarity around my answers. So if you're asked a "What If" or "Would you do A or B" type question, worry less about trying to anticipate the "right" answer, but focus instead on explaining your rationale clearly, bringing up tradeoffs, and applying your previous experience. * If you're interviewing for a technical management position, you'll be asked some coding and design questions. Amazon is fairly transparent about this expectation. The questions were challenging but not unreasonable. My interviewers were explicit that they weren't expecting me to come up with the most optimal answer or cleanest code, and rather that this was to make sure I had enough technical familiarity to interact with a coding team. It took me a bit to get comfortable on the whiteboard since it's been a while since I've coded, and the experience of coding on a whiteboard is much different / unnatural than coding on a computer so I'd encourage you to practice a bit beforehand. * Amazon interviewers take copious notes on their laptops while interviewing. This can make parts of the interview seem less interactive. However, one positive aspect is that this naturally creates breaks in the interview flow -- while the interviewer is catching up typing, I get a minute to reflect a bit on my answers and for example in one instance, I caught a bug in my code. * I was very impressed by the quality, punctuality, and maturity of the interviewers. I talked to folks in various roles and they were all very professional and respectful. I'm aware that Amazon gets tons of candidates, but I never got the sense that I was just being put through an interview mill. My recruiter was also very professional and prompt at responding to my questions, I was put up in a nice hotel, etc. Overall, I highly encourage you to apply to Amazon if you have strong leadership experience with some amount of technical familiarity. When doing so, there's no need to overly prepare; as long as you're refreshed on basic algorithms and design, and are ready to talk about and defend your experiences, you'll be well prepared.

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      Various questions covering the whole gamut of leadership, project management, design, coding, decision-making, personnel challenges, etc.
      Answer question
      6

      Other Engineering Manager interview reviews for Amazon

      Engineering Manager Interview

      29 July 2025
      Anonymous interview candidate
      No offer
      Neutral experience
      Average interview

      Application

      I interviewed at Amazon

      Interview

      interview process has tech and people management, tech design is usually a complex design including distributed system and people management is usually tell about a time question that will be related to the team and how to address the operations.

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      How will you assess the quality
      1 Answer

      Engineering Manager Interview

      10 June 2025
      Anonymous interview candidate
      London, England
      No offer
      Neutral experience
      Average interview

      Application

      I interviewed at Amazon (London, England)

      Interview

      Terse and dismissive, I didn't get the feeling the interviewer wanted me to succeed. The questions were very much focussed on my past experience rather than my qualities as a manager.

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      Lots of questions about experiences.
      Answer question

      Engineering Manager Interview

      17 June 2025
      Anonymous employee
      Seattle, WA
      Accepted offer
      Positive experience
      Average interview

      Application

      I applied through a recruiter. I interviewed at Amazon (Seattle, WA) in June 2025

      Interview

      Got pinged by a recruiter on LinkedIn while exploring new roles. Started with the usual recruiter screen - past experience, leadership roles, and a bit on motivation for the switch. Amazon LPs started showing up even here. Next was a video call with the hiring manager + engineer. Focus was a mix of system design, people management, and leadership. Got a distributed caching design question, some deep dives into managing low performers, coaching team members, and how responsibilities get delegated. Heavy focus on “Hire & Develop the Best.” Did a couple Prepfully mocks beforehand - super helpful for structuring LP stories. Then came a writing assignment - 1-pager on a past achievement. They’re checking for clarity, ownership, and team-first mindset. Kept it sharp and gave credit where due. Final round was onsite - 5 back-to-back interviews covering system design, performance management, hiring, cross-team collaboration, and behavioral stuff. Expect detailed follow-ups, especially around how tough decisions were made, hiring in competitive markets, or when things didn’t go as planned. LPs show up in every convo - ownership, frugality, bias for action, all of it. Prep focused mostly on LP-aligned stories, people leadership, and scalable systems. Mocks helped simulate the real scene. Stayed real, leaned on actual experiences, and it clicked.

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      how u handle tradeoffs between scope, quality, and schedule
      Answer question
      1