They do two phone screens before inviting you onsite, and the phone screens consist only of coding problems in Coderpad (no conversation). In fact, there was no conversation with anyone in the entire process (not even a recruiter). I sensed that the engineers get stuck on phone screen duty because they both seemed disinterested from the start. There was no back-and-forth discussion at all. As I was thinking through the problems aloud, both told me that they preferred not to influence my thought process and would therefore make no comments. One of them asked me at the beginning: "Do you want to tell me about yourself?", and after I began talking I realized he wasn't really interested in the answer, so I stopped after 30 seconds to give him an escape, and he said, "OK, that's fine, here's the coding question." I greatly prefer technical interviews that emphasize the collaborative element of talking through a problem with your potential future colleagues, with whom you can debate the various ways to solve it. Groupon's process is extremely un-collaborative, and it sent me a signal that Groupon was not a good match for me. Fortunately, they are the exception, and I experienced much better phone screens and coding exercises with other companies.