The process took 3 days. I interviewed at The Princeton Review (Washington, DC) in Oct 2009
Interview
The executive director conducted a phone interview with me first. He asked questions about my work experience and seemed especially interested in my computer skills. He then scheduled a face-to-face interview to meet with him and two other managers.
On the day of the face-to-face interview, I arrived 15 minutes early and was asked to fill out a job application. While I was filling out my paperwork, I could hear the managers and a couple of other employees talking and laughing in their office so it seemed like a pretty casual work environment.
When I finished filling out my application, I met with the two managers, one at a time. One was the operations manager and she asked me administrative questions about my skills. The other was the field operations manager and she asked me more situational questions. I thought the 2nd interviewer's questions were tougher. The exec. director wasn't there that day, so I didn't interview with him, but the managers told me they would contact me by a certain date to let me know if I got the job because training would begin right away.
I waited for them to call and they didn't, so I assumed I didn't get the job.
I was surprised when I received a call from the exec. director asking for me to come in again to do a face-to-face interview with him. We scheduled to meet on the next day.
Just as before, I arrived 15 minutes early for the interview. I was already at the office when I received a call from the director, asking me if he could postpone the interview to an hour later. I agreed and found a cafe to sit in to review my resume.
Ten minutes before the interview, I was back at the office. I notified the other managers that I was there to meet with the exec. director. They told me he wasn't there yet so I waited. He arrived 30 minutes late but ready to interview me.
The interview with him consisted of the same questions he had asked during the initial phone interview. We went over my background and experience and computer skills. His questions were fairly easy. Unfortunately, he left the door of the interview room open, so people who walked by the room could hear what we were talking about. We were also interrupted a couple of times by employees poking their heads into the room to ask the director a question. The interview continued and the director told me he had hired another person for the position but she quit at the end of the first day of training. He didn't say why that person quit.
Anyway, when he stepped out of the room to discuss my application with another director, he left the door open and I heard them talking about me. I thought it was unprofessional.
He came back with an offer. I did not accept it right away and asked if I could take some time to think about it. He gave me until the end of the business day.
I applied online. The process took 5 weeks. I interviewed at The Princeton Review in Aug 2022
Interview
The process was somewhat smooth but lacked transparent communication. Timelines for when a response for next steps would be given were inaccurate. After what I was told was the "final" interview, I was given about a 5 day timeline for when decisions would be made. Over two weeks went by without ever hearing from the company that I was either getting an offer or rejected. I am assuming at this point I did not get the position. After putting a lot of time into the process, a follow-up would have been appreciated.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Basic interview questions: strengths, weaknesses, tell me about your resume, etc.