I was given a long-winded case study to analyze and then asked to create a written document showing my thinking and outlining the steps I took to get there. I was invited to interview after submitting the work (which included hours of work), and the interviewer pushed heavily on non-written case hypotheticals to test my quant skills. It felt like a bait and switch with what I expected for the interview given the materials. If I knew their focus was on solving math problems I would have prepared and approached the opportunity differently.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Complete a case study involving personnel placement efficiency.
Case study about acting as a Lyft PM and helping figure out the optimal pricing strategy. After you submit the case study they do an interview diving into your answers and your thinking behind what you put int he case study response.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
What is the LTV of a rider at X price where X is the recommended price you chose from the case study.
Automated email to ask you to do a case study on their product - no human interaction and essentially free work prior to even getting an interview. Didn't bother completing.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Complete a case study - and add "any additional documents that track your thought process such as notes, models, and other calculations - we don't just want to see the result, we want to know how you got there."