We’re
looking for our next Noogler - someone who’s good for the role, good for Google
and good at lots of things.
Things
move quickly around here. At Internet speed. That means we have to be nimble,
both in how we work and how we hire. We look for people who are great at lots
of things, love big challenges and welcome big changes. We can’t have too many
specialists in just one particular area. We’re looking for people who are good
for Google—and not just for right now, but for the long term.
This is the core of how we hire. Our process is pretty
basic; the path to getting hired usually involves a first conversation with a
recruiter, a phone interview and an onsite interview at one of our offices. But
there are a few things we’ve baked in along the way that make getting hired at
Google a little different.
Google Hiring Process Steps:
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Step 1: Apply
The process begins with searching for a job opening
that interests you by job department, location, or even by keyword.
Step 2: Contacted by recruiter
If you are a match for the position based on
qualifications and experience, a recruiter will contact you to learn more about
your background and answer your questions.
Step 3: Phone interview
The phone interview assesses your role-related skills
and proficiency, to determine whether you should be brought in for in-person
interviews. Typically phone interviews are conducted by someone in a similar
role and last about 30-40 minutes.
Step 4: Onsite interview
Our interview process for technical positions
evaluates your core software engineering skills including: coding, algorithm
development, data structures, design patterns, analytical thinking skills. For
business and general positions, we evaluate your problem solving and behavioral
abilities. Interviewers will ask you questions related to your area of interest
and ask you to solve them in real time. Remember, it's not a question of
getting the answer right or wrong, but the process you use to solve it.
Creativity is important.
Step 5: Hire by Committee
Virtually every person who interviews at Google talks
to at least four interviewers, drawn from both management and potential
colleagues. Everyone's opinion counts, ensuring our hiring process is fair
while maintaining high standards as we grow. Yes, it takes longer, but we
believe it's worth it.
Step 6: What's next?
Following your interviews, we will decide if you are
suitable for the job opening. We take hiring very seriously and like to make
consensus-based decisions. To that end, it can take up to two weeks for us to
make a definitive decision as to whether we'd like to have you join the team.
Please be patient with us – your recruiter will keep in touch with you when
feedback has been received and decisions made. Also feel free to get in touch
with your recruiter at any time.
How Google Interview: What they expect from job
seeker?
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We’re looking for smart, team-oriented people who can
get things done. When you interview at Google, you’ll likely interview with
four or five Googlers. They’re looking for four things:
1) Leadership:
----------------
We’ll want to know how you’ve flexed different muscles
in different situations in order to mobilize a team. This might be by asserting
a leadership role at work or with an organization, or by helping a team succeed
when you weren’t officially appointed as the leader.
2) Role-Related Knowledge:
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We’re looking for people who have a variety of
strengths and passions, not just isolated skill sets. We also want to make sure
that you have the experience and the background that will set you up for
success in your role. For engineering candidates in particular, we’ll be
looking to check out your coding skills and technical areas of expertise.
3) How You Think:
---------------------
We’re less concerned about grades and transcripts and
more interested in how you think. We’re likely to ask you some role-related
questions that provide insight into how you solve problems. Show us how you
would tackle the problem presented--don’t get hung up on nailing the “right”
answer.
4) Googleyness:
------------------
We want to get a feel for what makes you, well, you.
We also want to make sure this is a place you’ll thrive, so we’ll be looking
for signs around your comfort with ambiguity, your bias to action and your
collaborative nature.
How Google Decide/Hire The Candidate ?
-----------------------------------------------
There are also a few other things we do to make sure
we’re always hiring the right candidate for the right role and for Google.
We collect feedback from multiple Googlers:
-------------------------------------------------
At Google, you work on tons of projects with different
groups of Googlers, across many teams and time zones. To give you a sense of
what working here is really like, some of your interviewers could be potential
teammates, but some interviewers will be with other teams. This helps us see
how you might collaborate and fit in at Google overall.
Independent committees of Googlers help us ensure
we’re hiring for the long term:
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An independent committee of Googlers review feedback
from all of the interviewers. This committee is responsible for ensuring our
hiring process is fair and that we’re holding true to our “good for Google”
standards as we grow.
We believe that if you hire great people and involve
them intensively in the hiring process, you’ll get more great people. Over the
past couple of years, we’ve spent a lot of time making our hiring process as
efficient as possible - reducing time-to-hire and increasing our communications
to candidates. While involving Googlers in our process does take longer, we
believe it’s worth it. Our early Googlers identified these principles more than
ten years ago, and it’s what allows us to hold true to who we are as we grow.
These core principles are true across Google, but when
it comes to specifics, there are some pieces of our process that look a little
different across teams. Our recruiters can help you navigate through these as
the time comes.
At Google, we don’t just accept difference - we
celebrate it, we support it, and we thrive on it for the benefit of our
employees, our products and our community. Google is proud to be an equal
opportunity workplace and is an affirmative action employer.
Source: Google.com
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