Glassdoor users rated their interview experience at Reliance Industries as 100% positive with a difficulty rating score of 2 out of 5 (where 5 is the highest level of difficulty). Candidates interviewing for Manager and rated their interviews as the hardest, whereas interviews for Manager and roles were rated as the easiest.
Here are the most commonly searched roles for interview reports -
RIL GET Interview Review
Overall Rating: 8.5/10 | Technical: 7/10
What went well
Strong overall presentation and communication came through — the interviewers responded well to how you carried the conversation.
Your NTPC Farakka training experience and project work gave you concrete, relevant talking points.
Technical gaps identified
Seebeck effect / thermoelectric principles — this came up and you weren't able to explain it confidently. Worth a quick refresher: thermoelectric generation, how temperature gradients produce voltage, and where it's used in industrial instrumentation (e.g., thermocouples).
PID feedback loop fundamentals — you missed explicitly mentioning the feedback loop when explaining PID control. This is a core concept, so make sure your explanation always closes the loop: error → controller → actuator → process → sensor → back to comparator.
Bode plots — flagged as an area to shore up. Focus on: what magnitude/phase plots represent, how to read gain/phase margins, and their link to system stability.
Key behavioral lesson
Never volunteer unrequested personal information. This was the standout takeaway from the interview — stick to answering exactly what's asked, don't over-elaborate into territory that wasn't asked for.
For GET 2027
Since this feeds directly into your GET 2027 prep, it'd be worth:
Building a tight one-page refresher on Seebeck effect, PID loops (with the feedback path explicit), and Bode plot fundamentals — these are exactly the kind of control-systems/instrumentation basics likely to resurface.
Doing a couple of mock interviews where you practice concise, boundary-respecting answers to test the "don't over-share" discipline under pressure.
Want me to turn this into a Word doc or build it into a study checklist alongside your GET 22-week tracker?as in my experienceRecalibrated understanding toward personal internship narrative formatRecalibrated understanding toward personal internship narrative formatGot it — here's a first-person account of your RIL GET interview experience:
My RIL GET Interview Experience (Instrumentation)
I appeared for the Reliance GET interview for the Instrumentation stream. Overall, it was a solid experience — I'd rate my performance around 8.5/10 for presentation and communication, though technically I'd put myself closer to 7/10.
How it went:
The panel covered a mix of technical fundamentals and general engineering concepts. I was able to draw on my NTPC Farakka vocational training — especially the air/flue gas circuit work (FD fan to chimney) and my FGD pH control simulation — to give concrete, project-backed answers rather than just textbook responses. That seemed to land well.
Where I stumbled:
I was asked about the Seebeck effect and thermoelectric principles, and I couldn't explain it confidently on the spot.
When explaining PID control, I missed explicitly walking through the feedback loop — I described the controller action but didn't close the loop back to the sensor/comparator, which is the part that actually makes it a feedback system.
I got a bit shaky on Bode plots — reading gain/phase margins and connecting them to stability wasn't as sharp as it should've been.
Biggest lesson learned:
The one thing I'll carry forward — don't volunteer information that wasn't asked for. At one point I over-elaborated into territory the interviewer hadn't probed, and in hindsight it would've been better to answer precisely and stop.
Outcome:
Didn't convert this time, but it was a useful dry run — it's shaped exactly how I'm approaching GET 2027 prep now (tightening up control systems fundamentals and being more disciplined about scope in my answers).
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Technical questions (topics covered):
Explain the Seebeck effect / thermoelectric principles
Explain PID control (you answered but missed the feedback loop step)
Something on Bode plots — likely reading gain margin/phase margin and relating them to system stability
Likely questions around your NTPC Farakka training — air/flue gas circuit, FD fan to chimney flow
Likely a question tied to your FGD pH control simulation project (PID vs. manual control angle)
I applied online. I interviewed at Reliance Industries (Mumbai) in Dec 2025
Interview
Profile shortlisting aptitude assessment then personal interview held at their office in reliance corporate park at Navi Mumbai rcp overall bad experience since they don't have ability to hire deserving candidate
I applied through an employee referral. I interviewed at Reliance Industries (Ghansoli) in Jun 2022
Interview
The process included an HR screening, a technical interview covering Linux, AWS, Jenkins, Terraform, Ansible, Kubernetes, monitoring, and incident management, followed by a managerial discussion on project experience, stakeholder management, and operational excellence. The interviews included scenario-based questions related to CI/CD, infrastructure automation, troubleshooting, and production support.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Explain the CI/CD pipeline you have implemented and the tools involved.