I applied for the Sales Development Program and was initially excited when a recruiter got back to me pretty quickly. I made it through to the final panel interview, but things went downhill fast.
For starters, the person I was supposed to interview with showed up late. Then, their computer wasn’t working, so they had to do the video call on their phone. The connection kept cutting out during what was supposed to be a 60-minute interview. It was frustrating, unprofessional, and honestly, pretty disrespectful. I felt like I wasn’t given a fair chance to show what I could bring to the table because of these technical issues.
Two weeks later, I got the call that I didn’t get the offer. The feedback I received felt like a joke—it didn’t even seem to take into account the issues during the interview. My recruiter encouraged me to apply for another position and even gave me the hiring manager’s email to reach out directly. I decided to give it another shot, but this second experience was somehow worse.
I spoke with the hiring manager, who told me he’d schedule an interview after his PTO in 10 days. I waited patiently, but communication was awful. He eventually gave me a date and some prep materials but didn’t send the time or link for the interview. After days of no responses to my messages, he finally replied, saying the position had been filled internally. He then referred me to another recruiter for the same role on a different team.
So, I went through the process AGAIN, got to the final-round interview, and prepared extensively. The night before, at 10 p.m., I got an email saying my interview was canceled because a previous recruiter had mistakenly marked that I rejected the offer. This “mistake” disqualified me from interviewing for six months. I tried to explain the situation, but no one seemed to care or fix it.
This entire process was chaotic, disorganized, and showed no respect for my time or effort. It was, without question, the worst interview experience I’ve ever had. If you’re thinking about applying to Gartner, be warned—this company does not value candidates or treat them professionally.