This position was a bit more heavily weighted towards the visual side of communications. The process required a work sample of several short answers, a short essay, and two graphical interpretations.
It didn't strike me as strange until I was invited for the in-person interview. I was expecting to provide a PPT "consultation" with two staff prior to a panel interview.
What the consultation ended up being was me being invited into the corner office, full of the boss' personal effects. Being sat at her desk with a tiny laptop and a mouse with a button and position configuration I haven't used in years. Then sitting across a table from two people with clipboards and being read a question. No copy of the question was provided to me, which struck me as strange given that they were particularly looking for a visual communicator.