Went in for a 15 minute interview, went over my resume, typical basic informational. Was called back for a "working interview", was told to meet at the office. Then met with my interviewer for the day, and another employee. No explanation of what we would be doing. Got on the subway, chitchatted a bit (half interview questions, half just conversational), got off in HARLEM (like 148th st). Snuck into apartment buildings, knocked on doors, tried to sign poor uneducated people up for a donation that alot of them probably couldn't afford. Probably knocked on over 100 doors, got one poor sap to sign up. Took like 7 hours, horrible day. Worst interview process of my life. I "got the job" and said thanks but no thanks. Totally misrepresented the job, pay sucked, unbelievable waste of time.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Asked me to list my 10 best qualities, rate them on a scale of 1-10, and rank them. Then picked them apart. Oh, and they asked me to do this while riding the subway, and it had to be done by the time we got off our stop (about 15 minutes).
I applied online. The process took 3 weeks. I interviewed at G2 Worldwide (Chicago, IL) in Aug 2012
Interview
I applied online and a couple weeks later I was contacted via email for a phone interview. She was very friendly via email, and she was even more friendly during the phone interview. It was very conversational, and she worked hard to keep me from being nervous. It didn't last long (maybe thirty minutes), and she asked generic questions about my schooling and work experience and why I was interested in the company. She contacted me the next day to schedule an in-person interview to meet with the Director of HR. I arrived 15 minutes early and had to wait over an hour before she brought me in because she was in a meeting. I was a little annoyed, however, every employee who walked out to leave for the day (My interview was at 4:30pm) asked if I had been helped. I was really impressed that everyone worked together and was willing to help out. Eventually I met with her and she asked me similar questions as before. It only lasted about 15 minutes. She was very nice and pleasant and apologized repeatedly for making me wait. She said that had never happened before and she felt terrible. I believed her; it's business. A couple days later I was contacted by the first lady I spoke with and offered the position.