Imagine this: You walk into a company named Beyond Gravity and walk out feeling like you’ve just been pulled back to Earth by a broken shoelace.
From the outside, the company markets itself as space-age, agile, next-gen. From the inside? It’s an old-school spreadsheet scramble dressed in startup gear. The interview process spanned two long, detailed interviews across German, Portuguese, and English — where I laid out multi-country operations strategy, stakeholder workflow reforms, absolutely in with Excel logic models, onboarding protocols, error correction flowcharts, and more. I didn’t just show up — I delivered blueprints.
They were hiring someone to do everything:
• Be the expense gatekeeper for Switzerland.
• Lead Portugal’s rollout of their new software (ETA: one day) + SAP HR platform.
• Build SOPs.
• Create reporting systems.
• Integrate payroll touchpoints.
• Teach employees how to behave.
• And yes, remind people to upload their Uber receipts.
All under the title of “specialist,” but they wanted a team lead, analyst, trainer, and firefighter rolled into one — on a specialist’s salary, presumably.
And what do you get after investing hours of time across two multilingual rounds, live demos, and cultural alignment?
Nothing. Just a basic space rejection on a Sunday at 10 PM. This wasn’t an interview. It was a consultancy disguised as hiring.
Beyond Gravity sounds stellar in theory — rockets, satellites, the works. But if your hiring process can’t even land properly on the basics of follow-up, respect, and clarity, then maybe you’re not as ready for launch as you think.