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      Senior Software Engineer Interview

      8 Oct 2019
      Anonymous interview candidate
      Carpinteria, CA
      No offer
      Negative experience
      Average interview

      Application

      I applied online. The process took 6 weeks. I interviewed at LinkedIn (Carpinteria, CA) in Sept 2019

      Interview

      Office is ok. Interview process is a complete disaster. Not much care about people - they hire standard units for the army. And very against any remote work - felt like LinkedIn is stuck in old ages. I applied to a position of Senior SWE at Carpinteria office. They work on integrating the acquired lynda.com website. The life there is calm, developers are working on non-ambitious tasks like daily bugs. The campus is mostly for people who create educational courses, the tech team is small. Had a screening call in 2 weeks after the application, passed to the on-site interview. The process was slow, and the recruiters were on the edge of being unprofessional. The recruiter ignored the date/times for the calls I was providing, and when speaking just gave a fast-pacing burst of information, with a single aim to hang up ASAP. All the time they were pushing me to tell the list of other companies I'm interviewing with - lying that they knew the schedules, and it would help us to plan our process. This was clearly a BS, I didn't surrender my privacy. They also stress how much they care about people, but the reality (talks with their engineers, interviewing process) proved otherwise - will mention it below. They sent me a bunch of marketing emails - about a high honor to work at LinkedIn, how I must prepare to show all my algorithmic skills, how they value people, etc. I guess their phrase that "at lunch you will be assessed by your curiosity and questions" proves the aforementioned care about people - i.e. about the candidate coming for a whole day and trying to have a small break. However, as the organization was horrible, none of the SWEs knew about this assessment, and we just had a normal lunch. The only positive experience was when they sent me some docs to sign before the interview, and when I was unable to sign one of the improper items, they were flexible enough to skip it. The line was saying that I authorize LinkedIn to get any information about me from anybody on Earth, they don't have any responsibility to store it properly, and can use it for whatever purpose. Be aware of such nonsense, and do not sign it. The on-site interview consisted of 5 rounds + lunch, and it was a failure. The most funny part is that 4 of 5 ON-SITE interviews were done via VIDEO calls. Such visit didn't have any use for me - I didn't talk with the team. I could do it from home. But they call it an "on-site interview". The campus looks ok, though cubicles are dark. There's a basic lunch - merely something to make you to not leave the campus. The salaries are on a lower end, as Senior SWEs are unable to afford living nearby, but rather commute 40-60 miles daily. The hiring manager accidentally met me in the morning, but never came to talk and never visited the lunch. As said above - they hire units with some characteristics, not people. First round was a system design task. Bad organization: the whiteboard was located on the wall orthogonal to the camera, so my interviewer could see it very badly. I did this round well, though. Second round was an algorithmic coding task. Same struggle with the whiteboard at interviewer's side - I could hardly see anything - so it took a while to copy the drawing to a sheet of paper. One more LOL failure: they didn't even provide me a laptop to code. Had to boot mine, connect it, and then get to the URL the interviewer was using. This showed what kind of professionals work at LinkedIn! The task was about traversing a tree, I suggested a couple of solutions, and implemented the best one. Interviewer assumed I didn't know how to calculate ArrayList expansion amortization cost, but their quality of video conference (another failure) didn't allow us to continue that talk. Third round was an interview with a manager from New York - he was checking my culture and goals. The interview had no use for me, as he was not aware of the work here in Carpinteria. Just was telling me standard stuff how they care about people. He again pushed me to disclose the other companies I'm talking to. Fourth round was the only one with a local developer - whiteboard code for a segmentation/allocation task. This went ok, I suggested a number of alternatives, coded bit-mask format. Fifth round was for tech communication - had to whiteboard and explain a tech task to an engineer via a video call. The connection was bad, but I passed that. In a week the recruiter called to inform, that I didn't pass due to the first coding task. This was again a burst of the words read from his template with the immediate hang-up. I sent an email asking whether it's possible to re-check that result, because I completed everything and even in a shorter amount of time (remember their fiasco with laptop and whiteboard). But the response was never received. They care much about people, but they don't consider an ex-candidate to be a human. I guess I got everything I needed to know about LinkedIn.

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      Implement a tree traversal with some data extraction
      Answer question
      6

      Other Senior Software Engineer interview reviews for LinkedIn

      Senior Software Engineer Interview

      27 June 2026
      Anonymous employee
      Accepted offer
      Positive experience
      Average interview

      Application

      I interviewed at LinkedIn

      Interview

      The phone screen was more intense than I'd anticipated, lasting about 45 minutes with a mix of behavioral and technical questions. They probed my understanding of system design, specifically challenging me to think through a notification delivery service. I felt prepared, thanks to the company-specific questions I found on PracHub that outlined similar scenarios. The final rounds focused heavily on the scalability and reliability of systems. After a series of interviews, I received an offer, which I happily accepted. Overall, it was a rigorous but rewarding experience.

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      Design LinkedIn's notification fan-out service that delivers post-engagement notifications (e.g. someone reacted to your post or commented on your article) to millions of subscribers in near real-time, including how you would handle 'hotspot' creators with millions of followers, deduplicate redundant notifications when many actions target the same content, and guarantee at-least-once delivery across regional failures.
      Answer question

      Senior Software Engineer Interview

      25 Mar 2026
      Anonymous employee
      San Francisco, CA
      Accepted offer
      Positive experience
      Difficult interview

      Application

      I applied online. I interviewed at LinkedIn (San Francisco, CA) in Mar 2026

      Interview

      Had an initial phone screen round- Questions - Regular Medium level question, string manipulation Follow up - Concurrency related on top of the first question. Waiting for the second round right now

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      String manipulation, and graph questions as well
      Answer question

      Senior Software Engineer Interview

      28 Feb 2026
      Anonymous interview candidate
      San Francisco, CA
      No offer
      Positive experience
      Average interview

      Application

      I applied through a recruiter. I interviewed at LinkedIn (San Francisco, CA)

      Interview

      Was greeted by a person who basically walked me around the office during my interview, did a couple of rounds with a group on a whiteboard solving a coding challenge, and one to solve a software architecture challenge. Had lunch onsite. And one round of interview with someone who wasn't technical.

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      Write the code to generate an English language rendition of any integer up to 100,000,000.
      Answer question