TO THE NEW, Noida – Round 2 & Round 3 | Quality Engineering | Interview Experience
Anonymous User
243

Round 1 (Already posted):
TO THE NEW, Noida | Technical Round 1 (DSA, OOPS, DBMS) (Phone) | Quality Engineering


Round 2 – Technical Interview (Onsite)
We were asked to reach the Noida office by 9 AM, but due to an unexpected client meeting, we had to wait nearly 4 hours. The receptionist was polite and made the wait bearable.

Once called in, I was interviewed in person. After exchanging introductions, the interviewer asked for my resume and dove into my projects. Since all of them were development-focused, he directly asked me why I was applying for a Quality Engineering role. I explained my reasoning around job security and learning opportunities, and tried my best to align my goals with the QA role.

However, the interview took a tricky turn when he pointed out a quantifiable metric I had added in my resume (which was slightly fabricated to improve ATS score). He asked for exact steps taken to achieve it, and while I tried explaining around it, he wasn't fully convinced.

After that:

  • He gave me a simple DSA question to reverse a string.
  • I solved it on paper, explained the logic, and even optimized it.
    Finally, he asked if I had any questions and the interview ended.

Round 3 – HR Interview (Virtual)
This round was conducted online via Google Meet. After introductions, it followed a typical HR format:

  • Asked me to explain my projects
  • Why this role and why TO THE NEW?
  • Where I live and how I'd commute
  • Current and expected salary

The HR seemed satisfied and closed the round by asking if I had any questions.


Personal Reflection:

  • The technical round had a bumpy start due to resume fluff — definitely a lesson to avoid non-verifiable data.
  • Overall, a good learning experience about aligning your resume and answers with the role you're applying for.

Verdict:
Unfortunately, I got rejected.
I cleared all the interviews, but while my peer received an offer, my result was stuck in “awaiting decision” for weeks. After about a month, I finally received a rejection mail. I still don't know what went wrong, but I’m taking it as part of the journey.

Comments (1)