Envié una solicitud electrónica. Acudí a una entrevista en NetApp
Entrevista
The HR emailed me and scheduled an initial ten minute screening interview. I waited for an hour but she didn't call. So I sent her an email hoping to receive a response. She emailed me 3 days later and rescheduled.
The initial screening was a rapid fire question round with basic questions from all topics ( Networks, OS, Algos)- IPv4 address size, NP vs P which is harder etc.
The second round was supposed to be an hour long. They forgot to call again. After I emailed them, I received a call an hour late. By this time i was completely frustrated and even though the questions were very easy, I screwed it up.
Started with HR questions- Strength, Weaknesses, Idol, Why technology, When can you join, Are you currently holding on to any other offers/interviewing elsewhere etc.
Basic Technical Questions - Difference between TCP/UDP, C vs Java, What are the routing protocols etc.
It was a good opportunity but was a disappointing experience for me. Partly because of how i didn't answer well and partly because of how they kept forgetting to call.
Preguntas de entrevista [1]
Pregunta 1
As I said, nothing particularly hard. Definitely possible to clear initial rounds with fundamental knowledge from your Comp Sci degree program.
Solicité el puesto por otro medio. El proceso duró 4 días. Acudí a una entrevista en NetApp (Bengaluru)
Entrevista
I got into 3 rounds and all of them were virtual
1) assesment which has a duration of about 1 hr 45 minutes where I got 30 MCQs and 3 Coding questions
2) it was an one-on-one interview where the interviewer asked about my resume and asked me to solve about 3 coding questions regarding strings
3) the final round was managerial round , he asked a lot about my resume and the projects I have done so far.
Preguntas de entrevista [1]
Pregunta 1
Solving 3 coding questions in one on one interview.
Solicité el puesto a través de un captador. Acudí a una entrevista en NetApp (Bengaluru) en abr 2025
Entrevista
My interview experience at NetApp was underwhelming, to say the least. Despite presenting a polished and organized scheduling process on the surface, the underlying attitude toward candidates was far from respectful or flexible.
The interviews themselves were heavily syntax-focused. In Round 1, I was asked to solve DSA problems in Python, even though I primarily code in C++. There was no interest in testing problem-solving or logical skills—only whether I could recall Python syntax. Round 2 involved coding React components, again purely checking for syntax familiarity without any depth or evaluation of architectural thinking or real-world application skills.
What disappointed me more was the scheduling rigidity. Even after I communicated that I had important meetings, I was called in the morning to schedule interviews for the same afternoon. I was told bluntly that if I wasn’t available, I’d be dropped from the process. That level of inflexibility and lack of empathy felt extremely unprofessional. I ended up skipping key meetings just to accommodate their process.
For a company of NetApp’s stature, I expected a more thoughtful and skills-oriented interview process, along with a basic respect for candidates’ time and commitments. Unfortunately, my experience didn’t reflect that.
Preguntas de entrevista [3]
Pregunta 1
write a program to develop a navigation bar in React.js.
Netapp had a long and difficult process of interviews at campus placements at IIT Bombay. Difficult questions around data structures, algos and OS were asked. You need to be really good at these in order to crack