I applied online. The process took 2 weeks. I interviewed at Twilio (Dallas, TX) in Mar 2022
Interview
Did an easy hackerrank type challenge followed by an hour long interview with the hiring manager - tech deep dive kind of thing with the opportunity to learn about the team.
Interview went well, hiring manager went into what my next step would be at the end of the interview, implying it went well.
Never heard back. Reached out to my recruiter after a week and received no response.
Absolutely unacceptable and unprofessional - won't apply to this company again and will be sharing this experience any time friends are job seeking. This field is too demanding to be alienating engineers by not even having the courtesy to send an automated rejection email.
I was given a take-home coding exercise, which was quite a bit more hefty than most others I've had. Sent a link to the public repo a few days later. The following week, the recruiter asked me to send the link I already sent. When I followed up the next week, I found that the recruiter's email bounced - they were no longer with the company. So I then emailed a higher-up, who passed me along to another recruiter, who I then sent my exercise to yet again. A rejection followed soon after with no feedback.
Phone screen and onsite with a few leetcode and system design questions. The overall process was professional and the recruiters did a good job of keeping me up to date.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Implement an LRU Cache with some existing boilerplate code
I applied online. I interviewed at Twilio (Dublin, Dublin)
Interview
Very friendly talent acquisition staff member, was given plenty of info for technical test, including what concepts would be asked. Had to do a systems design interview also and was given enough to prep for that.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Programming question about traversing graphs, systems design question about a photo printing service