I applied online. The process took 6 weeks. I interviewed at AARP (Washington, DC) in Apr 2018
Interview
I applied online. Two weeks after applying I was notified via email by an AARP recruiter asking me to schedule a phone screen, which I did. Two weeks after the phone screen I was asked to come to the office for an interview, which I did. At that time I was told there were five candidates being considered for the position and I would be notified in a week--either way if I had advanced in the process or not. The AARP screener resigned his employment and a different recruiter contacted me a week after I was suppose to hear either way to say he was overseeing the process moving forward. The process seemed terribly unorganized, which left me feeling uneasy about what employment would be like at AARP and if I should remove my name from consideration? After I left a voice message and an email I was (two weeks after my interview) notified that the position was filled with another candidate.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Basic behavioral questions. I was 3-5 questions during the screening and 8-10 questions during the interview.
Long- waited over 3 months for process. The interview was with recruiter first, then hiring manager, then panel, then a few assignments and then a wait until decision. AARP is great, but this was a very long wait for someone in need of a job.
I applied online. I interviewed at AARP (Washington, DC) in Feb 2021
Interview
I have been in the interview process for five plus months now, and the communication has been lack luster from the talent advisor. Every time I followed up, he would be oh we want to move you to the next step. I followed up with him a month ago, and it has been silence since then (I followed up by emails three times during this month long period). I understand everyone is busy, but how hard is it to send a quick response giving a status update or saying we are moving on with different candidates. As a candidate I have given you my time and energy, but you are not able to give the respect back to me as a human being especially during COVID. This goes against AARP’s vision statement. I am very disappointed, I use to revere AARP as a top notch organization in the DCA area and this process has completely changed my opinion.
Process
1. Submitted my resume and took over a month to hear back from them
2. Phone interview with the talent advisor
3. Video interview with the hiring director—Her video would freeze often due to poor internet connectivity on her part, and she was not professionally dressed for the interview
4. Submit a report assignment—Was only given one sentence to produce the report and the talent advisor did not know any answers to the questions I had for the assignment
Reading other reviews, I am not the only candidate that has been ghosted and experienced extremely long interview periods (They do it to their own internal employees). If AARP is going to compete with Amazon for top-notch talent, they should look at their interview process and keep in mind they are dealing with human beings.
I applied through an employee referral. The process took 7 weeks. I interviewed at AARP (Washington, DC) in Nov 2019
Interview
The phone interview went well with both HR and the hiring manager. In the next step, the Panel Interview (3) followed a behavioral format that did not allow for questions, it felt like an inquisition on past behavior that needed context of the situation before offering an actual response. No time was allowed for the candidate to discuss what would it bring to the team.
Interview questions [4]
Question 1
What skills or experiences from your background are most relevant to this role?