I applied online. The process took 1+ week. I interviewed at Aha! (Menlo Park, CA) in Apr 2017
Interview
The interview process was very thorough. Aha! did a very good job at covering a lot of bases including my computer science foundations, general engineering practices, Rails specific knowledge, debugging skills, and soft skills. All of the interviews took place via video chats, which was nice because I was able to put a face to the name and it made it much more personable. All said and done, I did four interviews over the course of about a week and a half. The process moved along quickly and it was obvious they knew what they were looking for.
Interview questions [2]
Question 1
I was given a data modeling problem where I had to lay out how I would organize the models of a popular existing SaaS application
Had a screening interview with a recruiter via Zoom. It felt rushed, and the recruiter seemed distracted and uninterested. It was a bit awkward to answer his questions while he seemed uninterested from the beginning.
It appears to be a reputable company, but the recruiter didn't seem very engaged in the conversation.
Thanks for sharing your experience. We are sorry the interview felt rushed or disengaged. We do take notes during our conversations so we can carefully consider each candidate, but it should never come across as distracted. We will use your feedback to improve and truly appreciate the time you invested in speaking with us. We wish you the very best in your job search.
I applied through a recruiter. The process took 3 weeks. I interviewed at Aha! (Fort Collins, CO) in Jun 2024
Interview
The interview process was pretty short, and they were good about scheduling the next interview right after the previous one if things went well. It was 3 interviews in total after the initial recruiter call -- they were hour long chats with a tech lead, the director of engineering, and the CTO/co-founder.
They were basically just conversations about your previous experience while diving into technical detail on them. The first one also included a little system design for a popular music app, but it was all verbal (describing relations among the entities, how would you add this feature, etc.). The second one involved looking at some Ruby code and going over how you'd implement a couple of methods given the existing setup. In the last chat, the CTO really dug into fundamentals, especially around knowing how databases work. How are indexes used, what is the underlying data structure, and even deeper on some stuff that stumped me. Then he asked some questions around React and Redux.
I felt pretty good about the CTO chat, and we even talked about salary expectations at the end, but the recruiter called me the next business day and told me they weren't moving forward, which was a bummer. I'd gone through some other interview processes with typical Leetcode questions, but I enjoyed the conversational nature of these interviews, and I enjoyed talking with everyone. They all seemed like smart people that would be fun to work with.
My feedback was that they wanted someone with more Ruby/Rails experience, which I found odd. I was up front that I only had 2 years of experience with it (but several years in other frameworks), and we didn't discuss much about it, except going into how I'd look into a performance issue with a Rails endpoint. I mentioned looking into monitoring around it, using a debugger to step through the endpoint, etc., but didn't initially mention the obvious around checking the logs (something I do all the time lol). I guess that was enough to not move forward despite everything else.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
1. How would you design this popular music app (verbally)?
2. How would you implement these Ruby methods given some initial code (verbally)?
3. What is the underlying structure used for DB indexes?
I applied online. The process took 2 weeks. I interviewed at Aha! in Oct 2023
Interview
The first interview was with a tech lead. The second was with the director. And the third one with the CTO. Overall, I enjoyed the interview. It was all conversational, with a bit of emphasis on computer science fundamentals. The CTO is a really cool dude; he asked good thought-provoking questions. Even though I did not do that well in the interview with the CTO, I still very much enjoyed the conversation. My only advice is to have a better interviewee tracking process. I showed up for two interviews and nobody was there. One was canceled because the person was sick, as I found out later; the other one was accidentally set an hour later than what I was told. Not a big deal, but would be nice if the company implemented a better system for tracking interviews. Overall, I would not care about the small deficiencies of the interview process if I got an offer. It sounds like a really cool company to work for.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
What are some recently released web features (css, js, html) that you recently used?
Thanks for taking the time to write. We appreciate your thoughtful note. I definitely missed our scheduled meeting. I do my best to avoid missing meetings, but I just messed up. It was my fault as I explained. And it was unfortunate that you also had another meeting cancelled. We should have done better to notify you. I appreciated meeting you and the time you invested in sharing your background and experience with us. We wish you all the best in your ongoing job search.