Solicité el puesto a través de la escuela superior o la universidad. El proceso duró 2 meses. Acudí a una entrevista en Exponent (Menlo Park, CA)
Entrevista
After expressing interest in the company I was invited to lunch at the Menlo Park office. Talked to several people from the group I was interested in working. Though these lunches are considered informal, you ARE being evaluated and it pays off to be well prepared and research the people you'll be meeting.
I then had a phone interview with a senior manager - this is a great opportunity to get your questions answered and to show genuine interest in the position.
After the phone conversation, was invited for a full day interview, which included a technical presentation. The presentation is extremely important: make it as broad as possible while emphasizing your ability to work with others and solve problems. If you've gotten this far in the process they know you have good technical skills, now you have to prove that you have the ability to communicate effectively ("give me a 3min summary of your research" was a popular question) and answer questions on the fly.
Preguntas de entrevista [1]
Pregunta 1
The most "interview-y" type questions were asked by the HR representative. They're not difficult, but they expect concise answers:
how do you plan to market yourself?
what do you think Exponent does?
what do consultants do?
how much of your project was team-based?
how did you hear about us?
Envié una solicitud electrónica. Acudí a una entrevista en Exponent (Natick, MA) en ene 2026
Entrevista
I completed three rounds of interviews — two remote video calls, first with a senior scientist and then with a managing scientist — and was subsequently invited for an onsite interview. Unfortunately, the organization of the onsite visit did not align with my expectations. Less than 24 hours before the interview, the schedule reshuffled, and the meeting was set in Natick during a January snowstorm, With a high risk of travel difficulties. In practice almost all of my conversations still were virtual, despite the travel.
What added to the confusion was that the onsite location was neither the office I had applied to nor one where the team is primarily based. Even my host and another scientist had to travel from neighboring states to meet there, which made the arrangement feel inefficient.
The HR interview was surprisingly strange. I was asked to discuss technical aspects of my research — essentially giving a brief technical overview — and to repeat information that was already included in my application. Although it mentioned that they already had all the info from my initial application form! many of the same questions were asked again. This interview felt unusual, as HR interviews are typically focused on administrative or cultural fit rather than technical evaluation
first + second rounds and then in person interview. They want to see how you connect your work with theirs. team is great and they are a pleasure to talk to.
Envié una solicitud electrónica. El proceso duró 3 meses. Acudí a una entrevista en Exponent
Entrevista
The interview process spanned three months from the initial phone screen to the final round, largely due to slow and inconsistent communication from HR. Responses often took weeks, and when they did arrive, they were typically to say more time was needed to schedule the next step.
The first round was a 30-minute phone interview with someone who had joined Exponent about two years prior. The second round was a virtual interview with a principal-level scientist.
The final on-site round felt excessive for the position. It lasted seven hours and included:
A one-hour technical presentation with Q&A;
Individual meetings with seven interviewers;
A lunch session.
Most interviewers were professional and well-prepared. Senior staff in particular asked thoughtful, well-structured questions and provided sufficient context. However, two interviewers, both relatively new, stood out for the wrong reasons. One seemed to attempt a McKinsey case-interview style question without proper setup, leaving it confusing and irrelevant to the role. Another focused the entire session on a topic I had already disclosed was outside my expertise, showing no interest in exploring other areas of my skills or knowledge.
Overall, while some parts of the process were fair and constructive, the length, HR delays, and unprofessional behavior from certain interviewers made the experience unnecessarily frustrating.
Preguntas de entrevista [1]
Pregunta 1
Root cause analysis of certain technical scenarios