Glassdoor users rated their interview experience at Nautilus Labs as 50% positive with a difficulty rating score of 3 out of 5 (where 5 is the highest level of difficulty). Candidates interviewing for Client Success and Senior Software Engineer rated their interviews as the hardest, whereas interviews for Client Success and Senior Software Engineer roles were rated as the easiest.
The hiring process at Nautilus Labs takes an average of 21 days when considering 2 user submitted interviews across all job titles. Candidates applying for Client Success had the quickest hiring process (on average 21 days), whereas Client Success roles had the slowest hiring process (on average 21 days).
Here are the most commonly searched roles for interview reports -
company allowed horizontal movements, and I moved from the deployment team to the engineering team within 6 months. I've helped interview other candidates, and you can expect easy to medium level leetcode questions.
I applied online. The process took 2 weeks. I interviewed at Nautilus Labs (New York, NY) in Dec 2021
Interview
It had a series of technical interviews and a take home assignment. The interviews were all redundant, they all asked the same questions about the assignment. The process took a couple of weeks
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
They asked a lot of questions about the take home assignment.
I applied online. The process took 2 weeks. I interviewed at Nautilus Labs in Sept 2022
Interview
The process started out very positive. Everyone I spoke with was very friendly and enthusiastic about their role. But I have 2 major gripes that tainted the overall experience.
1) It was mentioned multiple times that they were looking for someone with fullstack experience but with a focus on the frontend. However, no part of the interview process was frontend focused. You can definitely get through the entire process with 0 frontend knowledge as long as you're good with algorithms.
2) I went through the entire interview process including a lengthy virtual onsite only to be ghosted at the end. I reached out to the recruiter multiple times to followup and never heard anything.