VMware Interview Questions & Reviews in San Francisco, CA Area
Interview questions and reviews posted anonymously by interview candidates.
Ratings are reflective of location and job title.
|
Difficulty Rating [?] Based on 3 ratings |
Interview Experience [?] Based on 3 ratings
|
VMware has 11,918 connections on Glassdoor
| 1–3 of 3 VMware Interviews | Sort by |
Member of Technical Staff at VMware
Posted Oct 15, 2009
3.0
Average Interview
|
Overall Positive Experience
|
Received and Accepted Offer
|
Interviewed Mar 2008 in San Francisco, CA (took 2 weeks)
A recruited contacted me for a position with a specific team looking to fill a spot. Had a phone interview, then got flown to CA for a round of in person 1:1 interviews. Very algorithm based, problem solving, seeing if you understand how to code something. Very standard.
Interview Questions
Negotiation Details
I was able to negotiate. Compared their offer to another offer, with justification for the gap.
Other Details
I got the interview through a Recruiter and the interview consisted of a Phone Interview, a 1:1 Interview and a Background Check.
More VMware Member of Technical Staff Interviews
Helpful Interview?
Yes |
No
Inappropriate?
Engineering at VMware
Posted Oct 13, 2009 — 0 of 2 people found this helpful
1.0
Very Easy Interview
|
Overall Positive Experience
|
Received and Accepted Offer
|
Interviewed Aug 2007 in San Francisco, CA (took a day)
everything from your initial communications with the company, organization and planning of the interview, number and type of interviews, and any advice you might offer to other interview candidates. Bonus points for your perceptions of the people, office, and work culture.
Interview Questions
Other Details
I applied In-Person and the interview consisted of a Phone Interview, a 1:1 Interview and a Group/Panel Interview.
More VMware Engineering Interviews
Helpful Interview?
Yes |
No
Inappropriate?
Software Engineer at VMware
Posted Mar 19, 2009 — 1 of 1 people found this helpful
4.0
Difficult Interview
|
Overall Negative Experience
|
Interviewed and No Offer
|
Interviewed Jan 2007 in San Francisco, CA (took a day)
At the time I had my resume posted online; I was approached by VmWare and requested to interview with them by phone.
I agreed to take the interview and was informed that the interview would be related to C++ questions.
When the interview started, I was initially slightly taken aback at the brusque manner in which the interview proceeded; not unfriendly per-se, but there was hardly any preamble before the interviewer launched into his series of questions. I wasn't terribly put off by the manner, really; this was a screening interview, after all... however, as an experienced engineer with a steady capability to land the job I want, I now view interview processes as a 2-way street and expect the opportunity to ask at least a couple of questions.
The real issue I had with the interview was the content. Out of about 10 questions, not one related to C++, which was what I had been told; I don't care if an employer wants to keep the content of their interview secret, but to advise me of the content in advance, but then switch tack without warning is bad coordination at best, and sneaky at worst.
The actual questions asked were complex algorithm problems, not generic problem solvers, but very specific algorithmic-related scenarios, for which you pull a known algorighm out of the box and recite it; essentially a memory-test.
It became a bit ridiculous when the interviewer indicated that if I already knew the answer that I should tell him this and he would go to the next question.... So I was expected to, within seconds, over a phone, solve fairly complex problems that would normally take at least a couple of hours to review and solve from first principles.
It was basically a catch-22 situation; If I happened to know the answer , I wasn't supposed to give it, but if I didn't know the answer I was supposed to, at the drop of a hat, come up with the full solution.
It's a fairly standard process to present oblique problems to interviewees and see how they grapple with them; I do this myself when I am on the other side of the desk, but in a phone interview you simply don't have the time to work through hyper-complex problems that have specifically only one answer, and it is impossible for the interviewer to determine your collaborative capabailities; it becomes, essentially, a stress-test.
Anyways, in the end I muddled through the problems; for the algorithms I didn't know I did pretty well, I think. In fact I pulled some decent solutions out on short notice. I didn't care if they called back, I wasn't going to accept any job there; I knew I would end up working with the interviewer and, to be frank, I don't work well with people who are inflexible in their thinking. They did call back about a year later indicating that they were interested in talking to me again. At this point I had landed a great position at a different company and was still a bit annoyed so I declined.
In conclusion, for this particular group, and perhaps only this person in question, it appeared that they were filtering out people who didn't have robot-savant type quailities. This might not reflect the culture as whole, but it certainly turned me off this place.
The lack of a follow-up email after the interview was not very kosher, either... I didn't hear from them again until they were on a different recruiting drive.
Interview Questions
Other Details
I got the interview through a Recruiter and the interview consisted of a Phone Interview.
More VMware Software Engineer Interviews
Helpful Interview?
Yes |
No
Inappropriate?


