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      McMaster-Carr

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      Related searches: McMaster-Carr reviews | McMaster-Carr jobs | McMaster-Carr salaries | McMaster-Carr benefits | McMaster-Carr conversations
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      Development and Design Interview

      21 Feb 2015
      Anonymous interview candidate
      Stanford, CA

      Other Development and Design interview reviews for McMaster-Carr

      Development and Design Interview

      20 May 2019
      Anonymous interview candidate
      New York, NY
      No offer
      Negative experience
      No offer
      Positive experience
      Easy interview

      Application

      I applied through university. The process took 1 week. I interviewed at McMaster-Carr (Stanford, CA) in Feb 2015

      Interview

      I was offered an interview at a university career fair, and I met the recruiter at a cafe on-campus the following morning. The interview was painless, and the person who interviewed me was friendly and easy to talk to. She asked me common questions regarding my resume and past experiences; no technical questions. The interview lasted for less than hour. I sent a thank you email to her personally (she provided me with her contact information) but did not get a direct response from her. A week after the interview, a recruiting coordinator asked me to fill out paperwork. I sent it in that night, and the next morning, I received a copy-and-pasted rejection email from the same recruiting coordinator. This all happened within 8 days.

      Interview questions [3]

      Question 1

      What are you passionate about?
      Answer question

      Question 2

      If you were to go back to school (undergrad), what would you do differently?
      Answer question

      Question 3

      Describe a school or work project.
      Answer question
      Easy interview

      Application

      I applied through a recruiter. The process took 1 day. I interviewed at McMaster-Carr (New York, NY) in May 2019

      Interview

      Reached out on LinkedIn to set up a phone interview. The woman over the phone had no expression in her voice and was speaking a mile a minute. Didn't feel like I was having a conversation with a real person. Was told the position would be with development teams for various products (mobile apps, website, etc), but when I asked for further questions in regards to the tech or team structure, she did not know the answers, acted dismissive, and didn't bother to attempt to find additional information. Her only explanation was that people with development experience were "atypical" for this role? Also she kept confusing the title of the role with a "general management" position during the conversation. Overall it was a very confusing and negative experience. 0/10 would not recommend.

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      What's your GPA
      Answer question
      1

      Development & Design Interview

      24 Sept 2018
      Anonymous interview candidate
      No offer
      Positive experience
      Average interview

      Application

      I interviewed at McMaster-Carr

      Interview

      They asked standard behavioral questions. Was asked about previous programming experiences and why did I choose my school. Also talked about the job description itself and the various projects people worked on.

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      Describe a project you worked on.
      Answer question

      Design and Development Interview

      4 May 2018
      Anonymous interview candidate
      Elmhurst, IL
      No offer
      Positive experience
      Easy interview

      Application

      I applied through a recruiter. The process took 2 weeks. I interviewed at McMaster-Carr (Elmhurst, IL) in Apr 2018

      Interview

      I was reached out to on LinkedIn and had a phone screening with the recruiter. It was straightforward; she asked why I chose my university, what I do in my current role, what I’m looking for in my next role, etc. The next day, I was offered a final round interview onsite in Elmhurst, IL. Even though the company has bad reviews, I was curious to see what the workplace was like for myself, so I agreed to fly out. I wish the company had asked me for my preferred airline, airplane seats, and hotel chain when booking my flights, as they put me on mixed-airline flights in seats at the very back of the plane. The on-site final round interview consisted of a 1.5-hour tour of the office and warehouse, 45-min 1:1 interview, 15-min break, 45-min 1:1 interview, 1-hour lunch (with 2 interviewers), and the final 45-min 1:1 interview. Overall, I really enjoyed talking to the interviewers, as they were friendly and informative. The conversations were relaxed and purely behavioral with no technical questions, as they don’t expect you to be technical coming in. No complaints about the interview process itself, as everything went smoothly, but the one thing that made me a little uncomfortable was the interviewer print-out they give you at the beginning. This was a schedule with pictures and details about your interviewers, and this was really helpful in guiding the day, but the interviewers’ universities were listed on there which came off as pretentious. Most companies don’t list this, and it’s not usually even a topic of discussion, so this led me to wonder how their initial candidate search works. As for the company culture... I was shocked to see how closed-off the company is to the rest of the world. The place runs on homegrown software, meaning they write all their apps and sites themselves and prefer to not deal with 3rd party vendors. For a company this size, I wasn’t expecting this, though to be fair, they aren’t a tech company. The term “tech debt” has only recently been introduced to the company, and a lot of their procedures and policies are outdated. For example, there are no guidelines for managers to grow their direct reports’ careers, there are no set title distinctions between entry and senior level positions, they only recently realized that they shouldn’t hide their products from Google for fear of proprietary theft, and there aren’t specific methods of encouraging constructive feedback. Overall, it seems that this company—specifically the Systems department—is lagging behind in best practices. The work life balance seems great! There’s a policy that only directors can have work email on their phone, which I think is an innovative and healthy mindset. The benefits seemed okay, though the retirement benefit isn’t a real 401k and is on a vested schedule, which is disadvantageous for the employees. The office itself was nice. I thought the design promoted a positive work environment, as the conference rooms were sleek and modern, and the cafeteria was welcoming. The warehouse was really interesting to tour, as everything was impressively well functioning and efficient (especially for the size of their operations). Overall, I had an enjoyable experience interviewing with McMaster-Carr. Unfortunately, I wouldn’t recommend the company itself given what I learned in the interview process. If you’re looking to pick up technical skills, I’d recommend working for an actual tech company (unless you have no background at all in this field and are looking for a place to get started).

      Interview questions [3]

      Question 1

      Why are some products selling less frequently on our iPad app compared to the website?
      Answer question

      Question 2

      Tell me about a project that you would’ve done differently.
      Answer question

      Question 3

      Are you willing to relocate to the Chicago area?
      Answer question