I applied online. The process took 1+ week. I interviewed at General Dynamics Information Technology (Fairfax, VA) in May 2011
Interview
One interview with a group of people. Very surprised at the questions that were asked, family status, religion, car, and what nationality I was. It was clear they have no training on how to conduct interviews. After I was hired, I suggested to the PD they might want to learn how to interview people, but the PD didn't care and felt you ask people what religion they are and other strange questions.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Lots of illegal questions. See above. Very weird process.
I applied in-person. I interviewed at General Dynamics Information Technology (Salt Lake City, UT) in Dec 2016
Interview
I walked in due to no online response. There was no urgency and there has been no communication back to me. I was told the hiring manager was "out of town", so I left my resume for review by his assistant. Next thing I know, "could you wait a few minutes, the hiring manager would like to visit with you." :-)
I applied through a staffing agency. The process took 4 weeks. I interviewed at General Dynamics Information Technology in Dec 2012
Interview
Over the phone interview by regional manager. It took about 30 minutes. Interviewer asked about my recent projects and what were the challenges and successes. We discussed some of the local market challenges and recruiting of quality vendors.
I applied through an employee referral. The process took 1 day. I interviewed at General Dynamics Information Technology (Fort George G Meade, MD) in Jul 2011
Interview
Since General Dynamics Information Technology (GDIT) bought out the small company I was working for - NetConn Solutions, there was no formal interview. I will use the initial interview with NetConn Solutions for the other questions where the acquisition by General Dynamics Information Technology.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
One of the questions asked during the transition from NetConn to GDIT was a concern with being able to keep a high-level security clearance (which was no problem for me).