Sales Engineer applicants have rated the interview process at NetApp with 3 out of 5 (where 5 is the highest level of difficulty) and assessed their interview experience as 50% positive. To compare, the company-average is 64.7% positive. This is according to Glassdoor user ratings.
Candidates applying for Sales Engineer roles take an average of 61 days to get hired, when considering 2 user submitted interviews for this role. To compare, the hiring process at NetApp overall takes an average of 23 days.
Common stages of the interview process at NetApp as a Sales Engineer according to 2 Glassdoor interviews include:
Phone interview: 67%
Group panel interview: 33%
Here are the most commonly searched roles for interview reports -
The process took 4 months. I interviewed at NetApp in Mar 2010
Interview
I was contacted by a recruiter who found me on LinkedIn. He and I talked for about 30 minutes and he asked for my resume'. After reviewing my resume' and apparently forwarding it to the hiring manager, he said she would definitely be contacting me. I heard back from her about 2 weeks later via e-mail to set up a phone interview. We talked for about an hour and a half, about me, my experience, NetApp, what the job would be like. She wanted me to talk to a couple of members of her team. I heard from them about 2 more weeks later. Those conversations lasted about an hour each, the first I really connected with and was made to feel like I was a top candidate. The other was a little more challenging, but I won him over to my side before it was over. During this time they were struggling to fill the sales rep position locally after making a couple of offers and not making any headway. So, time drug on and I heard from the recruiter in June asking if I was still interested. Seems they also had a "hiring freeze" during this time, as well. Eventually, they had hired a sales rep and wanted me to meet with him. Ok, this sounds great! Meeting went well, was impressed by his youth and aggressiveness. Was to meet his manager a couple of weeks later, but a personal situation on his part kept that from happening, met with sales rep and another sales engineer instead. Again, all was great, conversations were fantastic and I was lead to feel that I was the top candidate again. Then, nothing. No followup, no response to inquiries, just silence. I heard later that apparently, the new sales rep had a guy he wanted to bring in to the position and I suppose that's the route they took. Shame though, I would have been a good fit for the job and the team. Also sad that after all the effort and the followup on my part that they couldn't at least drop me a note to let me know they took a different direction.
I applied through other source. The process took 2 days. I interviewed at NetApp in Jun 2010
Interview
Had a phone interview with a sales engineer manager, then another with hr manager. Both were very friendly and ended up the conversations with, 'later bro'. Some technical aspects were talked about, and finally ended up with please summarize what you just said in an email and then copy me with your resume. Not sure if they were really interested in the resume or searching for it, but I happily obliged.
Group interview was mainly about history, and then to technical questions and a presentation. The technical questions were fairly basic about the storage industry. The conversation switched over to more personal goals in other areas such as the stock market, athletics, etc.. Company culture was described and the people were very friendly. I'd like to see what the day-day looks like but wasn't really able to see anyone from the company just yet. A little time passes between the phone interview, and the regular interview.
Apparently this is the interview process:
phone: to cover who BSes
first interview - usually with supervisors and maybe a technical manager (if your job is technical)
2nd interview - with several engineers that will grill you for skills. Verify that you aren't lying about your skills from the resume.
3rd interview (if you make it this far) is usually with one of the VPs or the head of the business unit that you'll be going to.