I applied online. I interviewed at Aftershoot in Nov 2025
Interview
The entire process was very messy, with a lot of comes and gos and crazy e-mails and messages late night. They cancelled several times. I also received a huge case study with many pages to do. It was very disrespectful and demanded a lot of time. They demanded even design creation for a product marketing position. During the interview I felt the team was not fully present. They seemed very tired and some members were not very nice as well. They were pretty impatient and the interview was done ultra late (they had to do overtime it seems). That alone showed me this was not the company for me at all.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
How do you motivate the team during difficult times.
I applied online. I interviewed at Aftershoot (Mumbai) in Apr 2026
Interview
Round 1 — HR Screen
Standard calls after applying through the careers page. Professional and straightforward.
Round 2 — VP of Marketing
The conversation stayed at a surface level throughout, focused on my general workflows and approaches. For a company whose core product is AI, I expected some depth on AI in content marketing or at least a perspective on where the category is heading. There was none. When I asked follow-up questions to understand the company's AI content workflows, the responses were vague. A VP of Marketing should be able to articulate a sharper POV than what came through here.
Round 3 — Culture Fit with Head of People Success
Warm, well-structured, and genuinely pleasant. This person clearly understood talent management. In hindsight, I think I understand why the process was fast-tracked to this round (maybe a departing position needed to be filled ASAP)
Round 4 — Takeaway Assignment
The brief stated the assignment should take 3 to 4 hours. What they actually asked for was a 6-month content strategy with channel ratios, traffic and signup projections, a research-backed article with distribution plan, delegation framework, and a content scaling system. I took two and a half days and delivered something I stand behind completely.
One additional flag: I applied for a Content Lead role. But on the assignment document, the title had shifted to Sr. Content Marketing Manager with no explanation offered. It broadly aligned with my experience so I did not make much of it, but worth knowing going in.
Round 5 — Panel Presentation
One panelist was on time. One did not show up. The VP joined 15 minutes late. When I raised the title mismatch and the assignment time estimate, the responses were unconvincing. A panel should arrive with pinpointed questions and genuine feedback rather than expecting the candidate to monologue for an hour.
Within the assignment I had identified 2-3 critical business issues that was part of the assignment of going beyond content. Rather than treating this as a strategic audit, the VP repeatedly pushed me to go deeper into the live problem. At one point he suggested I should "be more trusting" when I declined to go further into the solutions as I've clearly stated I've faced such issues in interviews before.
A senior leader should should know where the scope of an assignment ends and paid consultation begins.
The assignment was a real creative challenge and I am proud of the work. But the process revealed a gap between the quality of thinking the role demands and the quality of thinking being applied to hiring for it.
Candidates, please avoid marketing jobs here and proceed with due diligence!
Phone call: covered the basics
Interview with Design Lead: Explained my case studies, process, experiences from past projects
Technical Round with Design Lead and HR: Reviewed the Aftershoot app prior to the interview, audited the issues, solved one of them together
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
How do you manage business expectations with design reality?