Decent interview process. Terrible communication operations. What initially felt frustrating about their lack of follow-up actually ended up offering a lot more clarity to me about cultural fit in the long run.
The interview process itself was fairly standard: an introductory conversation with HR focused on experience and cultural alignment, followed by an in-person interview with two project managers at the Halifax office.
My initial conversation with HR was engaging and left me optimistic about the company’s culture and direction. We discussed growth, leadership, and organizational mindset in a way that suggested a people-focused environment. That positive impression carried into the in-person interview, which felt conversational, thoughtful, and professionally engaging. I appreciated the opportunity to connect with the PMs and left the meeting with a strong impression of the team itself.
At the conclusion of the interview, I was told I would receive an update the following week regardless of the outcome. Afterward, I followed up professionally with HR and sent thank-you messages to the interviewers. While the interviewers acknowledged the connection requests, I never received any communication from HR regarding next steps or a hiring decision.
Unfortunately, that lack of communication ultimately overshadowed what was otherwise a positive interview experience. Asking candidates to take time away from their work and personal lives to attend in-person interviews, only to provide no follow-up whatsoever, demonstrates a disappointing lack of professionalism and respect for candidate time.
As someone who has participated in hiring processes from the employer side, I understand that recruitment can be busy and operationally demanding. However, basic communication and closure are not optional parts of a strong organizational culture — especially in an era where recruiting workflows can easily be managed through automated systems and standard candidate processes.
In hindsight, the experience gave me valuable insight into the company’s internal standards and people practices. While I initially viewed the lack of follow-up as frustrating, I now see it as clarifying. Unless there is a meaningful shift in how candidate and employee relationships are valued operationally, this is not an organization I would consider interviewing with again.
I applied online. The process took 4 weeks. I interviewed at Bluedrop (Halifax, NS) in Apr 2019
Interview
3 rounds, 1 technical, 1 semi technical. Technical round is the hardest, rest are easy. 3rd semi technical round, they'll ask some coding related questions. Think algorithmically and you should be fine.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
3 questions of data structures and algorithms. They don't care about efficiency, brute force is fine, as long as the answer is right. Learn simple sorting, and traversing algorithms.
I applied online. The process took 1+ week. I interviewed at Bluedrop (Halifax, NS) in Mar 2022
Interview
Had an initial phone screening first. Then was contacted for an interview. They wanted to do a Zoom interview, but I was not currently set up for that. They made special arrangements for me to come in to the office; they were very accommodating.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Behavioral interview questions and questions like do you have any teaching experience.