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      Software Engineer Interview

      Apr 27, 2011
      Anonymous employee
      Mountain View, CA
      Accepted offer
      Positive experience
      Difficult interview

      Application

      The process took 1 week. I interviewed at Google (Mountain View, CA) in Apr 2011

      Interview

      The Google interview process typically includes a phone interview or two as well as an on-site, in a process that takes a couple of weeks to a month. I had a pending offer from another company, so they expedited my interview (skipped the phone), and expedited the hiring committee review. I got flight info for two days later, flew out, interviewed the next day (Friday), and had an offer by Monday. At the on-site interview, they put you up in a pretty nice hotel and provide a rental car. GPS is recommended, as the Mountain View / Sunnyvale suburbs can be difficult to navigate. The Google campus is simply spectacular. They have dozens of buildings, with bikes for transportation between bulidings, buses in and out of different neighborhoods, multiple dining cafes, multiple gyms, etc. Google is also located all over the country (and world) - you can actually pick your location if MV suburbia isn't your cup of tea. Projects/teams are distributed across separate offices. As for the actual interview: 5 separate 45 minute interviews with other Software Engineers. The interviewers come from a wide background (infrastructure, front end, etc). Questions were all technical in nature, mostly coding oriented. They did ask pointed questions about previous experience, projects, general resume stuff, etc. The interview questions were well thought out and relatively innovative. The interviewers presented them clearly, and were very helpful in discussing solution possibilities. Some of the questions were pretty straightforward, but the trickier ones were excellent - we were able to devise solutions and optimize them multiple times, discussing what was better about different approaches. Everyone I talked to was very upbeat, intelligent, and nice. The last interviewer I had seemed a bit surly at first, but quickly warmed up and became very affable. The hiring process was very informative. The recruiters gave loads of information when asked, and were very up front about a lot of aspects of the company. The interviewers themselves were able to answer many questions about the gritty details of working at Google. The hiring itself is actually done by a separate group of people from the interviewers, and is decided somewhat up the chain of command.

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      Google asks interviewees to not share specific details on interview questions. They were coding-oriented questions. They required a varied set of algorithms and data structures to solve, especially including graphs, heaps, linked lists, and hash tables. Sorting algorithms were also emphasized. Some of the interview questions were quite unique, but could be abstracted in neat ways. Google does provide a significant amount of material before the interview(s) to help you study, including links to reading material and the types of questions you can expect. They were relatively difficult, but the interviewers were helpful.
      1 Answer
      3

      Other Software Engineer Interview Reviews for Google

      Software Engineer Interview

      May 4, 2014
      Anonymous employee
      Auburndale, FL
      Accepted offer
      Positive experience
      Difficult interview

      Application

      I applied through an employee referral. I interviewed at Google (Auburndale, FL) in Apr 2014

      Interview

      Direct onsite because I interviewed in the past and did well that time. From the time I sent my resume to interview day: 2 weeks. From interview day to offer over the phone: 2 weeks. The syllabus for the interviews is very clear and simple: 1) Dynamic Programming 2) Super recursion (permutation, combination,...2^n, m^n, n!...etc. type of program. (NP hard, NP programs) 3) Probability related programs 4) Graphs: BFS/DFS are usually enough 5) All basic data structures from Arrays/Lists to circular queues, BSTs, Hash tables, B-Trees, and Red-Black trees, and all basic algorithms like sorting, binary search, median,... 6) Problem solving ability at a level similar to TopCoder Division 1, 250 points. If you can consistently solve these, then you are almost sure to get in with 2-weeks brush up. 7) Review all old interview questions in Glassdoor to get a feel. If you can solve 95% of them at home (including coding them up quickly and testing them out in a debugger + editor setup), you are in good shape. 8) Practice coding--write often and write a lot. If you can think of a solution, you should be able to code it easily...without much thought. 9) Very good to have for design interview: distributed systems knowledge and practical experience. 10) Good understanding of basic discrete math, computer architecture, basic math. 11) Coursera courses and assignments give a lot of what you need to know. 12) Note that all the above except the first 2 are useful in "real life" programming too! Interview 1: Graph related question and super recursion Interview 2: Design discussion involving a distributed system with writes/reads going on at different sites in parallel. Interview 3: Array and Tree related questions Interview 4: Designing a simple class to do something. Not hard, but not easy either. You need to know basic data structures very well to consider different designs and trade-offs. Interview 5: Dynamic programming, Computer architecture and low level perf. enhancement question which requires knowledge of Trees, binary search, etc. At the end, I wasn't tired and rather enjoyed the discussions. I think the key was long term preparation and time spent doing topcoder for several years (on and off as I enjoy solving the problems). Conclusion: "It's not the best who win the race; it's the best prepared who win it."
      2501

      Software Engineer Interview

      Jun 9, 2026
      Anonymous Interview Candidate
      No offer
      Neutral experience
      Average interview

      Application

      I interviewed at Google

      Interview

      First call with recruiter. Mainly resume questions nothing too technical. Then methods round, was a tagged question from leetcode. Interviewer pushed back on first design and steered me to the optimal solution.

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      Why are you leaving your current role.
      Answer question

      Software Engineer Interview

      Jun 7, 2026
      Anonymous Interview Candidate
      Los Altos, CA
      No offer
      Neutral experience
      Difficult interview

      Application

      I interviewed at Google (Los Altos, CA)

      Interview

      Went with an OA which was pretty easy. Then got to second round (1 coding and 1 behavioral). Both were pretty straight forward. Then got to the onsite. They asked me leetcode hard questions. I was able to do well in one but failed the other one.

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      Why do you want to work at Google?
      Answer question

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