My experience with the AMII interview process was extremely disappointing and unprofessional, both within the Industry Team and the Advanced Technology Team. Across multiple rounds, I encountered a recurring pattern of disorganization, lack of technical depth, and poor communication.
To begin with, interviewers regularly showed up late to scheduled calls without apology or explanation, reflecting a lack of respect for the candidate's time. This was a consistent issue, not a one-off.
The technical interview process was even more concerning. The questions were often generic, irrelevant to the role, and at times felt like they were hastily pulled from internet searches without true understanding. In one case, for a role focused on time series analysis, the interviewers asked random, surface-level questions unrelated to the problem domain. When I attempted to delve into deeper technical discussion, it quickly became evident that the interviewers lacked the necessary knowledge to engage meaningfully. This raised serious concerns about the technical credibility of the team.
After passing the technical round, I was invited to a situational/behavioral interview that was equally frustrating. Many of the questions were irrelevant to the role for example, being asked how I would run a social event, my favorite basketball team, and to evaluate the behavior of former colleagues. It was difficult to understand how these were in any way related to a one-year machine learning residency contract.
The worst part, however, was the post-interview communication. After completing all three stages, I received no response for over two weeks despite following up. Eventually, a generic rejection email arrived three weeks later with no feedback or explanation.
This entire experience happened twice—once with each team—and both followed an almost identical, poorly executed process. AMII presents itself as a leader in AI research, but their hiring practices do not reflect the standards of a professional or technically competent organization.
I hope this feedback encourages AMII to reflect seriously on their candidate experience, technical evaluation practices, and internal communication protocols.