I applied online. I interviewed at Bask Health in Apr 2026
Interview
I interviewed for a Sales Engineer role and would not recommend the experience at all.
The company took me through a recruiter screen, a project that required several hours of work and a call with the Head of Product that seemed to have went well. I was told the next step would be a conversation with the CEO and to expect “more grilling”. Then they disappeared completely.
I followed up and they still did not respond.
That is not a minor communication gap. That is a broken hiring process.
If a company asks candidates to complete unpaid work, the bare minimum is closing the loop. A rejection email takes less than a minute. Ghosting someone after multiple rounds and a time-intensive project shows a lack of respect for candidates and poor internal organization.
This was for a Sales Engineer role, which makes the experience even worse. The role requires clear communication, technical credibility, process discipline, and customer trust. The interview process demonstrated none of those things.
Other Sales Engineer Interview Reviews for Bask Health
I applied online. I interviewed at Bask Health in Apr 2026
Interview
Applied for a Sales Engineer role. The initial conversations were great and I came away impressed by the product vision. They moved fast, which I really appreciated. I read the reviews beforehand and I was willing to give it a shot anyway.
Then it fell apart.
I explained my salary expectations to the recruiter early in the process. The offer came in well below what I'd already communicated, like the conversation never happened. I had to renegotiate from scratch. We got to an agreement, and the negotiation itself was fine. But not knowing industry standards for the role you're hiring for isn't a great look. It was their first SE hire so I gave them a pass, but I noted it. After we agreed on updated comp, I was asked to sign the original offer letter that still reflected the old numbers. I had to ask them to update it before I'd sign. Read what you sign for this company.
The offer letter was signed two weeks before my start date. In that entire window, no employment agreement was sent. It arrived on a Thursday, two business days before my Monday start. It was the most one-sided, employer-favored employment agreement I've ever seen. Read what you sign for this company.
When I told them I needed my attorney to review it, I was given two options. Sign by Sunday or wait over five weeks for the next "cohort" start date. There was no middle ground. They had two weeks to send this document and chose to wait until the last possible moment. The agreement itself contains a clause where the employee acknowledges they were given "reasonable time to consult with counsel." Two business days is not reasonable time. Read what you sign for this company.
The Chief of Staff responded that they didn't know I would want counsel to review the agreement and that they "usually send it out a couple days before start date." The person responsible for onboarding candidates doesn't know what's in the document they're asking people to sign.
I withdrew.
I've told you three times now. If you're considering this company, read everything carefully before you sign anything.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Describe a hard problem you've solved for a customer.
I applied through a recruiter. I interviewed at Bask Health in Mar 2026
Interview
First call was a recruiter screen, went great. Super friendly great conversation. They asked me my salary target, and I gave them a range. The reached out the next day and said that they wanted to schedule the next interview, but they had a take home assignment first. They sent me some vague instructions, and a link to their sandbox environment. The environment was very poorly put together and bombed out during the initial login, so I had to e-mail them... they asked if I had a second e-mail address because they couldn't reuse the first. I was able to get in then, but the platform was just janky - very poor documentation, odd wording on things (they called domain subdirectories "slugs"??), and most places required you to manually refresh your browser when you were adding new things to the demo. In the end, I was not even able to get the demo completed because of the lack of attention to detail from their team. I followed up via e-mail and they wrote "thats why we like to tell people to use the templates"... yeah I have the instructions you e-mailed. It didn't say that. I finally threw in the towel after wasting several hours and let them know that if I already invested more time into troubleshooting their product than I should have to spend so if they were interested in me for a candidate they would need to figure out whats next. A few hours later I got a form rejection e-mail that said they were rejecting me because my pay ask was too much.