I recently interviewed for the Content Writer position at CaseGuard, and while the company's AI redaction software serves a critical niche in law enforcement, the difficult interview process revealed severe organizational misalignment and unrealistic expectations. The grueling pipeline consisted of a screening, an interview with management, a 600-700-word take-home assignment, a timed live-writing test via screen share, and a panel interview. Despite this rigor, the role is fundamentally broken. The compensation is listed at $60,000 to $70,000 annually, which is well below the market rate for the high-cost DMV area and is simply not a livable wage for the level of expertise demanded. For that entry-level pay, they are demanding the output of an entire marketing department. The job description advertises a need for content strategy and analytics, but leadership explicitly clarified during the interviews that they only want an execution-only, volume-based writer to churn out three to four pieces every two weeks across 14 different vertical industries. There was also a clear "phantom headcount" bait-and-switch: the company promised future help and management opportunities, but management confirmed I would be the sole writer carrying the entire department's production. They asked me the same question multiple times about why I got laid off amid role elimination.
Furthermore, the operational culture is highly reactive and micromanaged. They require a generalized "skills exam" at the 90-day mark that all entry-level support staff take, signaling a complete lack of trust in senior talent. When asked how sudden emergencies are handled, the company explicitly stated that you must pivot to the new tasks, but your original deadlines might remain the same, a structural recipe for the sole writer absorbing operational friction through unpaid overtime. During the interviews, they also questioned my recent layoff, to which I explained the macroeconomic restructuring at my previous organization while emphasizing my enterprise-tested SEO and editorial competencies. When I asked them what success looked like in the first 90 days, I approached it strategically, but the panel dismissed strategy entirely, stating success is simply "someone who actually enjoys writing, because that's what you would be doing pretty much all day." Finally, despite demanding strict, rapid turnaround times from candidates and extracting hours of free spec work, the internal hiring committee suffered from such communication gridlock that they completely missed their own self-imposed final decision deadline. No offer after 3 rounds of interviews, one take-home test, and 2 live timed writing tests.