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      Senior Software Engineer Interview

      14 July 2015
      Anonymous employee
      San Francisco, CA
      Accepted offer
      Negative experience
      Average interview

      Application

      I applied through a recruiter. The process took 4 weeks. I interviewed at Nasdaq (San Francisco, CA) in June 2015

      Interview

      Interview process was straight forward, and very typical - talk with a member of the team, size each other up in terms of technical ability, and gel with personalities. Briefly talk with the team manager in a 2nd round, and if both like you - it's pretty much a done deal. Now comes the completely horrible part, and after I've had enough - I rescinded their offer, I have better uses of my time, much less completely unnecessary invasion into my personal / professional life. Mind you this was merely a contract job that was scheduled to last about a year, at a below average rate. Drug Screen - fine, we all know what this means though. Background Check - fine, whatever. Employment Verification - 7 years worth of it. FBI Fingerprints - I had to dig for this one, broker / dealers are subjected to it - to which then they just apply the "well everyone has to" card, seems excessive given the background check already. Now comes when it becomes just asinine. Have any of you worked for a start-up or a company that was dissolved as a result of the implosion in 2008? Who hasn't. However, since they can't call anyone just to "verify you worked for them" mind you, they insisted on the following: your personal IRS Transcript, W2, or paystubs. 1) The IRS only keeps that information available for 4 years. 2) Who keeps paystubs or paper W2's other than hoarders going that far back. 3) How is any of that relevant to the job being offered - it isn't. Would it matter if I made a $1, or $1M? Reasonable digital paperwork like contracts, job offer paperwork, and even timesheets don't count. Considering anyone with even a tiny fraction of a brain would come to a logical conclusion, it was the Great Recession after all, and it stands to be reasonable that they did the work, why would it matter if the last month worked was March or April, much less how does this have any bearing on what we want this person to do today? Oh yeah, it doesn't. This is the type of place that would insist on your Facebook password, or DNA sample if it were legal to make it a pre-condition to employment. Those kind of policies are company wide pervasive, and if you like being micro-managed without an ounce of trust - this is the perfect place for you.
      13

      Other Senior Software Engineer interview reviews for Nasdaq

      Senior Software Engineer Interview

      25 Mar 2026
      Anonymous interview candidate
      No offer
      Positive experience
      Average interview

      Application

      I applied online. I interviewed at Nasdaq

      Interview

      30 minute Phone screening with recruiter, If pass, receive coding assessment with 4 questions If pass, behavior interview with directors If pass, Onsite 3 hour interview, Frontend with vue, pretty simple, crud backend: theres tests written for a function, write the function to pass the tests, testing you for test driven development. Then system design

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      If pass, Onsite 3 hour interview, Frontend with vue, pretty simple, crud backend: theres tests written for a function, write the function to pass the tests, testing you for test driven development
      Answer question

      Senior Software Engineer Interview

      11 Feb 2026
      Anonymous interview candidate
      No offer
      Neutral experience
      Difficult interview

      Application

      I interviewed at Nasdaq in Feb 2026

      Interview

      The interview process consisted of multiple stages. First, there was a proctored online coding challenge that included: Multiple-choice SQL questions Data structures and algorithms questions in both C# and JavaScript A Vue.js section at the end The second step was a video call with the hiring manager, which focused on discussing experience and background. The final step was an onsite coding challenge split between frontend and backend work: Frontend (Vue.js): Build a simple todo list application where you can add tasks, mark them as complete using a checkbox, and filter tasks by name. Backend (C#): Complete three unit tests involving fetching data from a database, looping through the results, and processing the data with API calls. Overall, the process was fairly technical and hands-on, with a strong emphasis on practical coding skills.

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      Questions about your background, like how did you solve this a problem you faced
      Answer question

      Senior Software Engineer Interview

      14 Nov 2025
      Anonymous interview candidate
      Declined offer
      Positive experience
      Average interview

      Application

      I interviewed at Nasdaq

      Interview

      Interview was really nice and it clearly evaluates the persons knowledge. It had 1 virtual technical round. 2nd round face to face technical 3rd Manager round And Hr discussion. It has many hands on and dsa questions

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      Singleton different types of implement
      Answer question