I applied through a recruiter. The process took 4 weeks. I interviewed at Omio (Prague) in Oct 2025
Interview
It went smoothly overall — the process was quick, with decisions made promptly. There were four interview stages in total, and everyone I met was friendly; the conversations felt more like dialogues than formal interviews. The office itself was cozy and appealing, with solid benefits and the possibility of occasional business trips.
I reached the final stage, where they were deciding between two candidates. Unfortunately, the conclusion of the process was disappointing. I received a brief LinkedIn message informing me that I hadn’t been selected, along with a suggestion to schedule a call to discuss feedback later. I agreed, but never received any follow-up, and my subsequent messages (two emails) were ignored
I applied through a recruiter. I interviewed at Omio (Berlin) in Jan 2026
Interview
I applied to Omio for the second time, and unfortunately, my experience has been very disappointing on both occasions.
After successfully completing all stages of the recruitment process, I was informed that I would receive an offer. However, unexpectedly, I was later told that the position had been closed. This abrupt change was both confusing and unprofessional.
Additionally, during the process, I was asked to change my residence address to Berlin, which resulted in significant personal expense. This request gave me the impression that my application was being seriously considered based on that requirement, making the outcome even more frustrating.
Overall, my experience with the recruitment process lacked transparency and consistency. I would strongly encourage improvements in communication and candidate handling to avoid similar situations for others.
I applied through a recruiter. I interviewed at Omio in Jul 2025
Interview
1/10 - A sneak peak into the mismanaged, disorderly and highly toxic leadership. The interview process was indeed a trailer to the horror movie that would have unfolded had I joined this sinking ship!
What became immediately clear throughout this process - Omio’s internal decision-making is unstable aka dysfunctional leadership.
Over 8 weeks - interviews were conducted without any coherent structure. New steps + new rounds + new assignments kept on getting introduced.
At first you think that's senior leadership commitment but then you see through that's just a plot hole to waste candidates time to mask up for their own internal inability to structure a set process and timeline.
If you’re a thrill-seeker who enjoys plot twists, this hiring process might be exactly your genre.
Multiple and surprise addition interviews? Absolutely.
Hours of technical rounds and written rounds and more casework? Of course.
Weeks of glowing feedback? Naturally.
A last-minute announcement that the role never really existed in a stable form?
Why not.
It’s rare to see a company invest so much time convincing a candidate that a role is real — only to discover at the end that apparently no one internally was aligned on hiring in the first place.
If this is how decisions are made in recruiting, one can only imagine how smooth day-to-day operations must be.
Thank you, genuinely, for the clarity.
I learned everything I needed to know — without ever joining.