I applied online. The process took 1 day. I interviewed at Salesforge in Feb 2026
Interview
Call with a very cold RH that shot a series of questions.
No real discussion, she told me sho would give me a feedback the week later but I never heard of her anymore, although I asked for feedback.
I applied online. I interviewed at Salesforge (Mumbai) in Mar 2026
Interview
I recent had the first recruiter round with
likely an external recruiter from a Recruiting agency. She informed that the interview process is 3 rounds , first the current recruiter round , then a technical round and last one with the cto.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
The interviewer had fixed set of questions
1. Tell me about yourself
2. What made you apply to salesforge
3.What would you do if all the tasks you have are high priority
4. How do you handle burnout ? Have you had a burnout?
5. Do you prefer a startup or big organization ? And why ?
6. What are your salary expectations
I have not heard back from them yet about the outcome
I applied online. I interviewed at Salesforge in Jan 2026
Interview
The initial screening call felt extremely cold and artificial, with no real sense of dialogue. The interaction felt rushed and highly scripted from the very beginning.
All interview questions were provocative. After answering a question about handling highly demanding tasks, the discussion was immediately pushed back with "but what if ALL requirements are important" and "but what if the task MUST be perfect". These questions were already poorly framed, leaving little room for a realistic discussion.
Nearly every question revolved around "high demand", "high delivery" and "perfection", which suggests an unhealthy organizational mindset. The overall experience felt disengaged and transactional rather than conversational.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
All the questions were around high demand and pressure. Any mentions of prioritization and trade-offs were quickly dismissed with follow-ups like “ALL requirements are important” and “the task MUST be perfect”, leaving little room for a realistic discussion