Ir al contenidoIr al pie de página
  • Empleos
  • Empresas
  • Sueldos
  • Para empresas

      Impulsa tu carrera profesional

      Averigua cuánto podrías ganar, encuentra el empleo perfecto y comparte información sobre tu vida laboral y personal de forma anónima.

      employer cover photo
      employer logo
      employer logo

      Airbnb

      ¿Esta es tu empresa?

      Información
      Opiniones
      Sueldos y beneficios
      Empleos
      Entrevistas
      Entrevistas
      Búsquedas relacionadas: Opiniones sobre Airbnb | Ofertas de empleos en Airbnb | Sueldos en Airbnb | Beneficios en Airbnb
      Entrevistas de AirbnbEntrevistas para el puesto de Data Scientist en AirbnbEntrevista de Airbnb


      Glassdoor

      • Acerca de
      • Premios
      • Blog
      • Contacto

      Empresas

      • Cuenta gratuita de empresa
      • Centro de empresas

      Información

      • Ayuda
      • Normas
      • Condiciones de uso
      • Privacidad y opciones de anuncios
      • No vender ni compartir mi información
      • Herramienta de consentimiento de cookies

      Trabaja con nosotros

      • Anunciantes
      • Empleo
      Descargar aplicación

      • Buscar por:
      • Empresas
      • Empleos
      • Ubicaciones

      Copyright © 2008-2026. Glassdoor LLC. «Glassdoor», «Worklife Pro», «Bowls» y sus logotipos son marcas comerciales registradas de Glassdoor LLC.

      Empresas seguidas

      Sigue a tus empresas favoritas para estar al tanto de las últimas oportunidades y disponer de información de primera mano.

      Búsquedas de empleo

      Recibe recomendaciones y actualizaciones personalizadas al iniciar tu búsqueda.

      Entrevista de Data Scientist

      13 may 2013
      Candidato de entrevista anónimo
      Sin oferta
      Experiencia negativa
      Entrevista difícil

      Solicitud

      Solicité el puesto a través de la recomendación de un empleado. El proceso duró 1 semana. Acudí a una entrevista en Airbnb en abr 2013

      Entrevista

      A friend of mine had recently started working at Airbnb and they put me in touch directly with the hiring manager of the data science team. A referral is the quickest way to get an interview; I had applied to Airbnb weeks earlier and still hadn’t heard a peep. I had a pleasant half hour chat onsite with the hiring manager, who offered the option of coming for an onsite tour or a phone interview. It went well enough, and by the time I’d left the office, we’d tentatively planned a full onsite interview for the following week. The on-site interview was to be structured as follows: in the morning, I’d work on some basic data manipulation tasks under the guidance of the 2nd-in-command of the data science team. Following that, there’d be a half hour chat with him and another senior member of the team. Then, lunch with the whole team. In the afternoon, I’d have 3 hours to work on the “challenge problem”, an open-ended question in which I’d go through their past data to try and answer a question related to running their business more smoothly. At the end of the day, I would present my findings to the whole data science team. When I showed up that morning, Mr. 2nd-in-Command wasn’t available. The hiring manager himself, who seemed annoyed at having to intervene, got me set up at a standing workstation just a few feet away from where the data science team sat. You have the choice of using STATA, R or MySQL. After an hour or so, I’d finished the initial problems, and it was time for the chat with Mr. Second-in-Command and the other senior team member. Both were busy with meetings, so the hiring manager suggested I get an early start on the “challenge problem” before lunch. Working at a standing workstation got exhausting after a while. I asked the hiring manager for a chair so I could rest, but he never mentioned that by pulling a lever, the standing workstation could transform into a desk I could sit at. I didn’t figure that part out till mid-afternoon, when I saw someone nearby did the same. Airbnb’s data science team consisted of about 10 people. I found them to be extremely bright and a bit introverted. On a couple occasions during the afternoon, I walked over to the data science desks to chat and see what they were working on, but no one seemed to take the slightest notice that I was there. I asked Mr. Second-in-Command about the “chat” we were supposed to have earlier in the day. Looking as if I had blindsided him, he checked his calendar, then walked over to my standing workstation, asked me a couple questions about my background and whether I had any issues with the data challenge, then proceeded back to his desk. The “challenge problem” was simple in principle yet challenging, since there were so many ways to approach it. You only have 3 hours to do it, and it can take a good chunk of that to read in and understand the data. I wasn’t happy with the approach I took, but as the clock ticked I felt too committed to change anything. In hindsight, it would have been better to take a step back and think more creatively before diving in and trying the first thing that came to mind. At 4:30pm, Mr. 2nd-in-Command rounded up the data science team for my presentation. 8 people attended, not including the hiring manager, who was busy in meetings. 4 people brought their laptops and buried their noses in them and I had to fight for their attention. The team didn’t seem very impressed by my presentation, and by the time I was done it was clear I wasn’t getting any further in the interview process. I was disappointed in the day. Part of that was feeling like I could have done better on the data challenge, but I also felt let down by the process. It was less of an interview, and more of a skills test under pressure. In a way, that’s a good thing because they can see what you’re capable of. But it also feels like they’re giving you the cold shoulder as a candidate, as you’re spending all day on the skills test, and don’t get much of a chance to talk to anyone on the team. Lunch is only 30 minutes, and your mind is busy trying to think of solutions to the challenge problem. It also doesn’t help when neither of the 2 people who are supposed to interview you bother to do so. Given how little time I spent talking to people, I wonder why they don’t just give the skills test remotely, so you don’t have to take a day off work to do it. I know it’s a data scientist job and it’s mostly technically focused, but I was hoping that Airbnb would have been more fun to interview at. When I asked the team what they did as a team for fun, their reply was that generally, every other team besides data science was more fun to hang out with, and they hadn’t done anything as a team in a long time. It took 2 weeks for a recruiter to get back to me. Although an offer from Airbnb would have been hard to turn down because of their success and reputation, part of me wonders if I would have enjoyed it.

      Preguntas de entrevista [1]

      Pregunta 1

      I won't reveal the challenge question, but when you get it, take a step back and don't rush yourself. It's more important to have a good idea and know how to execute it, rather than trying to execute everything and realizing you took the wrong approach.
      Responder pregunta
      45

      Otras opiniones sobre las entrevistas para el puesto de Data Scientist en Airbnb

      Entrevista de Data Scientist

      16 oct 2025
      Empleado anónimo
      San Francisco, CA
      Oferta aceptada
      Experiencia positiva
      Entrevista normal

      Solicitud

      Solicité el puesto a través de un captador. El proceso duró 6 semanas. Acudí a una entrevista en Airbnb (San Francisco, CA) en jun 2025

      Entrevista

      Overall smooth interview process including combination of behavioral, coding, system design and research oriented questions. Through research oriented interviews you go through projects you have done and they ask questions about your work and then they propose an open problem and you should express your ideas. It is difficult to assess you performance on these interviews

      Preguntas de entrevista [1]

      Pregunta 1

      Implement a simple encoding for a collection of strings
      Responder pregunta

      Entrevista de Data Scientist

      5 jun 2024
      Candidato de entrevista anónimo
      Seattle, WA
      Sin oferta
      Experiencia positiva
      Entrevista difícil

      Solicitud

      Envié una solicitud electrónica. Acudí a una entrevista en Airbnb (Seattle, WA) en feb 2024

      Entrevista

      1. Behavioral-style phone call 2. Simple data exercise screener 3. Virtual onsite. Several rounds, including a prepared presentation, and a 2-part data analysis exercise. I think I flubbed the SQL part of that. I was frustrated about the presentation though. The instructions said to take no more than an hour prepping it (ok lol) and to keep it VERY short, and NOT to go as far as, say, simulating data to chart. I felt like I bent the rules to fit in more info, ideas, analysis, how I expect the results to look - a bit like a grant proposal - and then I got dinged for not further breaking their own instructions and making it yet more in depth. Oh well, no one said this process has to be fair. So, word to the wise: ignore their instructions and make your deck way meatier! On the bright side I'm glad they gave feedback about which parts of the virtual onsite I flubbed. They were friendly and interesting to talk to. It mostly seemed like a process at least vaguely aligned with their hiring goals for the role, which is honestly more than I can say for most interview processes!

      Preguntas de entrevista [1]

      Pregunta 1

      How would you analyze the effects of a major change to their product if it were not possible to run an A/B test?
      Responder pregunta
      7

      Entrevista de Data Scientist

      28 jun 2023
      Candidato de entrevista anónimo
      San Francisco, CA
      Sin oferta
      Experiencia negativa
      Entrevista fácil

      Solicitud

      Solicité el puesto a través de la recomendación de un empleado. El proceso duró 2 semanas. Acudí a una entrevista en Airbnb (San Francisco, CA)

      Entrevista

      reached out by recruiter, first round is live coding interview in hackerrank with two questions, one on data transformation and the other is writing pseudo code to call preprocessing and a classification model object and calculate variance of performance metric

      Preguntas de entrevista [1]

      Pregunta 1

      one column in data frame is a string such as [1,2,3,4,5], convert it to average number in int format
      Responder pregunta
      2

      Las mejores empresas en cuanto a «Remuneración y beneficios» cerca de ti

      avatar
      Google
      4.5★Remuneración y beneficios
      avatar
      Amazon
      3.7★Remuneración y beneficios
      avatar
      Meta
      4.6★Remuneración y beneficios
      avatar
      Fiverr Inc.
      3.5★Remuneración y beneficios