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      Data Analyst Intern Interview

      12 Jan 2026
      Anonymous employee
      Gurgaon, Haryana
      Accepted offer
      Positive experience
      Difficult interview

      Application

      I interviewed at Udayy (Gurgaon, Haryana)

      Interview

      The Amazon interview experience is legendary for being one of the most structured and "culturally specific" in the tech world. Unlike many companies where the culture is a background element, at Amazon, the 16 Leadership Principles (LPs) are the primary grading rubric for every single candidate. Whether you are applying for a Software Engineering role or a Warehouse Manager position, here is the breakdown of what the experience is like in 2026. 1. The Structure: The "Loop" After an initial recruiter screen and a technical assessment (for dev roles), you enter the Full Loop. This typically consists of 4–6 back-to-back interviews, each lasting 60 minutes. * The Mix: Each interviewer is assigned 2–3 specific Leadership Principles to "probe." * The Coding/Technical Part: For engineers, you’ll spend about 20–30 minutes on a technical problem (Data Structures, Algorithms, or System Design) and the remaining time on behavioral questions. * The Bar Raiser: One of your interviewers is a "Bar Raiser." They are from a different team and their job is to ensure the candidate is better than 50% of the current employees at that level. They have "veto power" over the hire. 2. The Secret Sauce: The STAR Method If you don't use the STAR (Situation, Task, Action, Result) method, you will likely fail. Amazon interviewers are trained to "drill down" into your stories. * Situation: Set the scene (briefly). * Task: What was the challenge? * Action: What did YOU specifically do? (Avoid saying "we" too much; Amazon wants to see your contribution). * Result: What was the outcome? Use data. (e.g., "Reduced latency by 15%" or "Saved $50k in annual server costs"). 3. Key Leadership Principles to Know While there are 16, these three often carry the most weight in the room: * Customer Obsession: Can you prove you’ve gone above and beyond for a user, even when it was difficult? * Ownership: Do you treat the company like it’s yours? Do you fix things that "aren't your job"? * Dive Deep: This is where they catch people who exaggerate. They will ask "Why?" five times until they reach the technical or logical limit of your knowledge. 4. The "Vibe" The experience is often described as rigorous but professional. * Note-taking: Don't be off-put if your interviewer is typing furiously while you talk. They are required to capture your stories nearly verbatim to present to the "debrief" panel later. * No "Culture Fit" fluff: Amazon doesn't care if they want to grab a beer with you. They care if you can demonstrate the Principles. Pro-Tip for 2026 In the current landscape, Amazon has added a heavy emphasis on "Success and Scale Bring Broad Responsibility" (added a few years ago). Be prepared to talk about the long-term impact of your work on the community or the environment, not just the immediate profit. Would you like me to generate a few mock interview questions based on a specific Leadership Principle?

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      The Amazon interview experience is legendary for being one of the most structured and "culturally specific" in the tech world. Unlike many companies where the culture is a background element, at Amazon, the 16 Leadership Principles (LPs) are the primary grading rubric for every single candidate. Whether you are applying for a Software Engineering role or a Warehouse Manager position, here is the breakdown of what the experience is like in 2026. 1. The Structure: The "Loop" After an initial recruiter screen and a technical assessment (for dev roles), you enter the Full Loop. This typically consists of 4–6 back-to-back interviews, each lasting 60 minutes. * The Mix: Each interviewer is assigned 2–3 specific Leadership Principles to "probe." * The Coding/Technical Part: For engineers, you’ll spend about 20–30 minutes on a technical problem (Data Structures, Algorithms, or System Design) and the remaining time on behavioral questions. * The Bar Raiser: One of your interviewers is a "Bar Raiser." They are from a different team and their job is to ensure the candidate is better than 50% of the current employees at that level. They have "veto power" over the hire. 2. The Secret Sauce: The STAR Method If you don't use the STAR (Situation, Task, Action, Result) method, you will likely fail. Amazon interviewers are trained to "drill down" into your stories. * Situation: Set the scene (briefly). * Task: What was the challenge? * Action: What did YOU specifically do? (Avoid saying "we" too much; Amazon wants to see your contribution). * Result: What was the outcome? Use data. (e.g., "Reduced latency by 15%" or "Saved $50k in annual server costs"). 3. Key Leadership Principles to Know While there are 16, these three often carry the most weight in the room: * Customer Obsession: Can you prove you’ve gone above and beyond for a user, even when it was difficult? * Ownership: Do you treat the company like it’s yours? Do you fix things that "aren't your job"? * Dive Deep: This is where they catch people who exaggerate. They will ask "Why?" five times until they reach the technical or logical limit of your knowledge. 4. The "Vibe" The experience is often described as rigorous but professional. * Note-taking: Don't be off-put if your interviewer is typing furiously while you talk. They are required to capture your stories nearly verbatim to present to the "debrief" panel later. * No "Culture Fit" fluff: Amazon doesn't care if they want to grab a beer with you. They care if you can demonstrate the Principles. Pro-Tip for 2026 In the current landscape, Amazon has added a heavy emphasis on "Success and Scale Bring Broad Responsibility" (added a few years ago). Be prepared to talk about the long-term impact of your work on the community or the environment, not just the immediate profit. Would you like me to generate a few mock interview questions based on a specific Leadership Principle?
      Answer question

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