The interview process at this company is incredibly intensive and spans about four weeks. It begins with a CCAT assessment, followed by a high-pressure technical panel interview with 4 to 5 engineers designed as a rigorous stress test of your architecture and infrastructure skills. If you clear that hurdle, you move on to a culture interview with the VP of People and Culture, and finally, a chat with the founders.
While the engineering evaluations are thorough, the company’s recruitment strategy relies heavily on the sunk cost fallacy and emotional manipulation. Despite openly boasting that they are looking for the "top 1% of talent," they completely conceal their budget until the absolute end of the multi-stage pipeline. The strategic goal appears to be getting high-value candidates to invest weeks of intensive effort and preparation, hoping they will feel too chronologically and emotionally invested to turn down an uncompetitive, lowball offer.
They are essentially trying to secure premium, elite infrastructure talent at standard, budget-rate prices.
Advice to Future Candidates:
My biggest recommendation to any Developer/ engineer interviewing here is to demand a transparent salary range at the very first stage. Do not agree to move forward to the technical panels or stress tests without a locked-in number. Otherwise, you risk investing an immense amount of time and energy only to find out at the finish line that their budgetary framework is fundamentally unaligned with your market value.