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      Exponent

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      Engineer Interview

      20 Sept 2016
      Anonymous interview candidate
      Menlo Park, CA
      Declined offer
      Negative experience
      Easy interview

      Application

      I applied through an employee referral. The process took 2 days. I interviewed at Exponent (Menlo Park, CA) in Jun 2016

      Interview

      Applied through an employee referral. I was invited to the office to meet a group of employees in an informal setting. This happened in the form of a lunch meeting with 2 principals, 2 senior engineers and 1 managing engineer. There was no agenda for this meeting, just a lunch and discussion on my research work at Stanford. The meeting went extremely well and I learned from my referee that exponent was very interested and there would a more detailed and structured interview session with senior and junior members of the firm. Since the lunch meeting was pleasant enough, I agreed to a job interview. As a European Non-American citizen PhD student, I asked whether they would apply for an H1-B the following year and the HR representative said that they would "evaluate it". I asked her what that meant, since this was a somewhat important detail that they hadn't mentioned previously and probably would not have mentioned at all if I hadn't asked. She said that the company invests serious resources in it's employees, so they had to make sure that the employee was good enough to merit this. Ok, but the H1B visa is unrelated to company or employee performance, it's required if you want to work in this country. It's not a bonus, raise, negotiation, etc ... it's a prerequisite. So that was puzzling. I told the HR lady that I already had other interviews and I would only consider Exponent if they filed for a work visa. She said that "they would discuss". Very well. The interview with the current employees was straightforward. The "technical" questions that they asked were so simple, any undergrad at Stanford could have answered it. Questions were based on the following topics, but involved minimal thinking and very just ridiculously simple: 1. Fracture and stress intensity factors in cylindrical thick-walled vessels. 2. Fracture in rods. 3. Trusses and force and displacements at nodes. 4. Buckling of columns. 5. Tensile stresses and strains. 6. Design of fluid valve. The overriding aspect of the interview was this: "Can you work long hours, work on weekends, work through holidays, work whenever needed irrespective of personal plans". I was amused by the fact that every single employee asked a version of this question and warned me that everyone worked extremely long hours at Exponent, almost as a sort of subliminal "RUN AND DON'T LOOK BACK". When it was my turn to ask questions, I asked: "Why should I work here?" and nobody could give me a satisfactory answer. The answers took the form of "we do interesting work", "you will have lot's of variety", "we provide career growth", but nothing substantial. If you interviewed at the local Whole Foods, they would give you the same exact answer. I asked "What if I can complete the assigned work in 30 hours instead of 40 hours"? Answer: We work on a billable hour schedule, so if you complete the work quicker than promised, we lose money. However, you can always complete the work earlier and carry out career development activities but charge the client for 40 hours. Apart from the ethical implications of this practice and the obvious dishonesty of charging someone for personal work, I was struck that employees HAD to bill more than 80% of their non-overtime work-week to get ahead. This means that you had to bill more than 35 hours a week out of a non-overtime work-week of 40 hours. However, since this is impossible unless you know everything about everything, you end up working 60 hours a week and bill 35, for a net efficiency of just over 50%. The salary offered for this job was $97,000 base salary with a bonus based on overtime. Umm ... that's not bonus, that's overtime. When I pointed that out, the HR lady said "Well, it's more than your base salary so that's a bonus." Excellent reasoning! Total salary after putting in 50 hour work-week every single week = $121,250. This is a fairly average number for the bay area, but at what cost? You are working late every night, putting in at least one day every weekend to earn a dishonestly termed "bonus". Evaluation criteria were remarkably murky for a technology company ... no straight answer on how they evaluated employees. Essentially based on how much you could get the senior employees to like you. For the wrap-up interview with HR, I made it clear that I would not be able to consider this offer, unless they applied for an H1-B right away and had the possibility to apply for a green-card in the near future. Overall, I did not think that I was a good fit for this white-collar slavery like, non-performance based, unnecessarily elitist company with a reputation for high turnover and limited growth prospects.

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      1. Fracture and stress intensity factors in cylindrical thick-walled vessels. 2. Fracture in rods. 3. Trusses and force and displacements at nodes. 4. Buckling of columns. 5. Tensile and shear stresses and strains. 6. Design of fluid valve. 7. Experience with design software and coding/programming skills.
      3 Answers
      16
      avatar
      Exponent response
      9y
      At Exponent we take the interview process very seriously, and thus we are concerned that you came away from your interview with incorrect impressions related to the Company’s recruiting and billing practices. There are several issues raised. I will address the two most important issues here. Exponent’s consultants know that the best way to get repeat business is to provide the best possible service, at a price that is commensurate with the value provided. Exponent has zero tolerance for unethical billing practices, and our policies and employee training reflect that position. It is conceivable that you misunderstood the context of the discussion. Fixed price work may indeed require less hours than anticipated and result in a write up. Conversely fixed price work may also require more hours than anticipated resulting in a write down. We communicate clearly with our clients about the form of the engagement at the outset. If we are billing on a time and materials basis, only hours worked on the project are billed. Regarding the immigration comments, Exponent only hires employees into our US entity who are eligible to work in the US. Non-US citizens must have a valid visa to work in the US. Interview candidates who prove to be exceptional as a result of the interview are offered jobs. Candidates who require an H1 visa are offered that sponsorship in the offer letter. Unfortunately we cannot control whether the visa will be obtained through the US government lottery process. Therefore we are very thoughtful in the interview process and do not make commitments we cannot ensure. The pieces of information provided by you (Stanford PhD, formal interview June 2016 preceded by informal lunch, offered $97,000, declined offer) do not match with any candidate in our process otherwise we would have reached out directly to invite more feedback and to ensure you receive accurate information about the issues you have raised. If you would like to contact me, please email me at sshepard@exponent.com. Sally Shepard, VP Human Resources.

      Other Engineer interview reviews for Exponent

      Engineer Interview

      16 Jan 2024
      Anonymous interview candidate
      No offer
      Negative experience
      Difficult interview

      Application

      I applied online. I interviewed at Exponent

      Interview

      The hiring manager did not show up the our scheduled interview and did not respond to my follow up email. I then received an automated rejection message from HR. Very disrespectful of the candidates time.

      Engineer Interview

      11 May 2023
      Anonymous employee
      Phoenix, AZ
      Accepted offer
      Positive experience
      Difficult interview

      Application

      I applied through university. The process took 2 months. I interviewed at Exponent (Phoenix, AZ)

      Interview

      The first few rounds consisted of video screening calls, which seemed to primarily serve as a character assessment. The conversations were split between experience, interests, and personal topics. After that, I was flown to site. The day I spent there consisted of a site tour, lunch, about seven 30-minute 1:1 interviews spread throughout the day, and a one-hour presentation of the research I was performing in my master's program. For interview difficulty, I selected difficult. While none of the individual interviews were particularly difficult (in fact I found them all to be enjoyable), the sum total of them--combined with the research presentation--necessitate an above-average rating.

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      Be prepared to handle the usual types of questions, such as describing how you've handle challenges (personal and technical), what your strengths and weaknesses are, etc. Also, many of the questions are just getting-to-know you, so feel free to talk about yourself. Be prepared to answer questions about your specific area of expertise/research. Since your interviewers may come from different backgrounds, be prepared to answer vague questions with interesting specifics (including the necessary background info).
      Answer question
      5

      Engineer Interview

      9 Apr 2021
      Anonymous interview candidate
      Declined offer
      Negative experience
      Easy interview

      Application

      I applied online. I interviewed at Exponent in Apr 2021

      Interview

      The interviewer had someone else in mind so the questions were tailored to that particular background. I thought that the company is trying to expand into different fields such as Gyrodata

      Interview questions [1]

      Question 1

      General questions with no purpose
      Answer question

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