Glassdoor users rated their interview experience at Amilia as 100% positive with a difficulty rating score of 3 out of 5 (where 5 is the highest level of difficulty). Candidates interviewing for Online Marketer and Sales Manager rated their interviews as the hardest, whereas interviews for Online Marketer and Sales Manager roles were rated as the easiest.
The hiring process at Amilia takes an average of 21 days when considering 2 user submitted interviews across all job titles. To compare, the average duration of hiring at similar companies like BlackRock, Inc. is 14 days, Fabricated Software, Inc. is 2 days, and Apple Inc. is 21 days. Candidates applying for Sales Manager had the quickest hiring process (on average 21 days), whereas Sales Manager roles had the slowest hiring process (on average 21 days).
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applied online.
1 st round with HR over the phone.
2nd round with Hiring Manager and another development Manager.
The director was very cold and did not seem interested in the interview at all.
The questions were simple and around managerial aspects.
HR rejected my candidacy via email, no explanation. When I asked for a bit more details, he never got back to me.
Straight forward process. They told me they really liked my background and profile and were even thinking I may be a fit in a higher-up position. I then got no responses from the recruiter for over 2 weeks until I received a generic they were going in a different direction.
I interviewed at Amilia in 2025. Throughout the process, I found their interviewing style a little outdated, but it was still a generally okay process. There were however two red flags in the process:
1. It is pretty clear that the company could not match my salary expectations, which is perfectly fine. However, instead of being straightforward about this, I was dragged through a process over a month long, before they finally made a very disappointing offer.
2. One of the managers who interviewed me made a comment along these lines: "we want you to know that at Amilia we appreciate soft skills as much as technical skills. We know that for some people, often women, their strength is not in the technical and we can appreciate that. For example X woman in this team is not the best dev, but she is the glue to the team". It did come with a disclaimer that it might come off as awkward, but left me uncomfortable all the same, and skeptical of the culture at Amilia. It was a very questionable comment at best and overall it made me think Amilia would not be a good place to work for me.