I applied online. The process took 4 weeks. I interviewed at Wayfair (Boston, MA) in Nov 2018
Interview
A recruiter reached out to me online and I applied. I then had a phone interview, which turned into an in-person interview in the Boston office. They arranged my travel and put me up in a nice hotel. The interview was long and I was asked to answer a lot of questions involving identifying typos in product descriptions, a fairly narrow task that was a bit off-putting as they did not bother asking too much about my resume and education. Then, I met with another woman for an Excel test. Though I am not too experienced with Excel, I have basic skills. She was very condescending as she walked me through the test and acted incredulous when I did not know to use the SUMIF function instead of doing it manually. I have an Ivy League degree with many accomplishments and qualifications; however, no effort was put into evaluating my critical thinking skills or management potential. It appears HR is merely looking for someone who checks boxes and is not willing to invest even a couple of days into training someone with strong potential and could easily learn a few Excel shortcuts. Overall, I was very turned off by the almost comically narrow focus of the interview on typos and Excel functions and the lack of getting to know a candidate on any kind of substantive level.
Also-- Wayfair recruiters have been contacting me ever since asking me to apply for the same position I was rejected for. It's pretty clear they're not very organized over at HR.
I applied online. The process took 4 weeks. I interviewed at Wayfair (Boston, MA) in June 2024
Interview
Starting with phone screen with recruiter, then a case study, and lastly a behavioral interview.
the recruiter will provide guides for all stages of the interview process.
There is also a video provided as an example for the case study interviews.
I applied online. I interviewed at Wayfair (Boston, MA) in Nov 2020
Interview
I interviewed with Wayfair several times. Each time I was rejected. I was scheduled for another interview. After an hour the person who set up the interview came back to me and said "this position is looking for a similar skill set from the other positions you interviewed for. So we are cancelling the interview. I was polite and asked where is the skill gap that was identified in the previous interviews that is missing? They said they weren't the person working on the position. I then asked how did you arrive at the conclusion that I had a skill gap and whose the best person to address it with? They would not answer after that. I found this process unprofessional that my resume grabbed their attention however they would not address any skill gaps.
I applied through a recruiter. I interviewed at Wayfair in Nov 2020
Interview
Lets just say I am very disappointed in Wayfair. The recruiter reached out to me on LinkedIn to discuss a few open positions they wanted to place me in. I had a 30 min phone call with the recruiter, who then set up the initial case study interview. After the case study happened (I think I did well, but honestly received 0 feedback), I was told the position had internal interest and they have to interview all of them first. Fine by me, internal promoting is a great practice, but why are you wasting my time if you reached out to me. After another week and a half of waiting, the recruiter passed me off to another recruiter to see if another position was open. There were some other spots open, so the recruiter set up three additional interviews (2 behavioral, and 1 more case study) over the course of 3 separate days. After I finished the interviews, I was told to wait another week just to get a phone call saying everyone really liked meeting you but we are moving forward with other candidates. What baffles me is the fact that I didn't even apply for these positions, and they strung me along keeping my hopes high throughout the entire month and a half long process just to be told no.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Typical "tell me about a time this happened to you"