I applied online. The process took 4 weeks. I interviewed at Lutron Electronics (Coopersburg, PA) in Mar 2013
Interview
Applied online and was contacted a month or two later for a phone interview. The phone interview lasted about an hour with general resume questions and a couple of brain teasers that were designed to understand your thought process better. About a week later I was contacted to set up on on-site interview in Coopersburg. I live about an hour away, but was offered hotel accommodations for the night before. Arrived at the Lutron campus early in the morning and was given the Lutron experience tour with about 5 other interviewees each interviewing for different positions. The rest of the day consisted of about a half dozen rounds of interviews. There was a general HR interview, a couple of technical rounds, and the role play. There was also lunch in between and the whole process lasted almost 9 hours. Everyone was really nice and the interview was ran smoothly. I was made an offer about 2 weeks after the on-site interview. Definitely the most intense interview process I went through, but it shows the importance places on finding the right people.
I applied online. I interviewed at Lutron Electronics
Interview
The first interview was a "technical interview" with no indication of this. I walked into the interview not knowing it would essentially be a quiz and little to no questioning about my actual resume. To be fair it was general engineering questions most mechanical engineers will learn in college. They asked me to draw a few graphs, fill in some tables, and to take apart a "click pen" and to describe what each piece was made of and the manufacturing process used for each part.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Draw the stress-strain curve of a ductile material and explain the plot.
I applied through a recruiter. The process took 4 weeks. I interviewed at Lutron Electronics
Interview
Not a good experience. I felt very disrespected in terms of both my time (they wanted me to interview for 7 hours straight) and the interviewers’ questions/responses during the interview process. The questions don’t make sense/are vague and when I tried asking for clarification they would only repeat themselves. When I was giving answers, they would respond with “are you sure?” And “are you really happy with that answer?” And did not go on to correct me or give feedback. Very low energy from all of the engineers I interviewed with (who were all very white and very male I might add). Did a super weird role play exercise which was unnecessarily intense and quite frankly, a waste of my time. I have interviewed with and received offers from top engineering companies, 2 of which had an intense technical portion with a follow up panel presentation (and I did not ever feel disrespected, treated unfairly, or like I was being strung along with no regard for my time like I did at Lutron). I don’t know if this company is struggling to hire, but they must be with how bad this experience was. By the time I went on to second round of interviews I was already over it and knew this company was not for me. I went forward with it because the interviews were prescheduled and I did not want to appear flaky, but in hindsight, I should have cancelled it before enduring 2 more hours of feeling talked down to and not listened to. I think they forget that an interview goes both ways. Would not recommend.
Interview questions [2]
Question 1
What material is this product made of that I am showing to you over video call?
Role play: pretend you are an employee on your first day of work at Lutron. Deal with (insert problem that no first day employee would ever be required to solve) and find a solution in an hour. They also gave me random fake phone numbers and characters I had to “interact” with. No breaking character. The whole thing was extremely weird.
There was one Zoom interview so far. The interview was all technical. They quizzed me on statics, thermo, manufacturing (which I hadn't learned much of). Prepare stress-strain curves and manufacturing of pens
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
How would you manufacture the components of a pen.