Glassdoor users rated their interview experience at Inseego as 100% positive with a difficulty rating score of 3 out of 5 (where 5 is the highest level of difficulty). Candidates interviewing for Sales Manager and rated their interviews as the hardest, whereas interviews for Sales Manager and roles were rated as the easiest.
The hiring process at Inseego takes an average of 10 days when considering 1 user submitted interviews across all job titles. Candidates applying for Sales Manager had the quickest hiring process (on average 10 days), whereas Sales Manager roles had the slowest hiring process (on average 10 days).
I applied through a recruiter. I interviewed at Inseego in Aug 2025
Interview
3 rounds of interviews (30 minute call with QA manager, 1 hr panel call, 1 hr coding)
During manager call, manager joined late and did not turn on the camera. Probably she was doing other tasks during the call. She asked technical questions and I answered with too many examples then added a question back to her. She just mowed on to the next question which proofs that she wasn't even listening.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Who made architectural decisions on your projects?
I applied through an employee referral. I interviewed at Inseego (Bengaluru) in Jul 2025
Interview
The interview process was multi-stage and quite thorough. It started with an online assessment focused on problem-solving and technical concepts, followed by two rounds of technical interviews. These involved data structures, system design, and scenario-based questions. The final round was with an HR manager to assess cultural fit and communication skills.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Can you walk us through a project where you solved a real-world problem using technology?
First off - the pay was dreadfully low. As in, 30% below market. But I was not employed, so anything is better than nothing. And, to be fair, they did continually ask if the pay was OK.
Second, I was very overqualified for the role. They knew it. I knew it. We agreed that would not be a factor, as the company was growing and a more appropriate role would open up and allow me to train a backfill.
So, all that said, there was an interview with the CEO for a lowly Business Analyst role. This is micromanagement at its worst. That was the round that I was de-selected. I would not have accepted, if offered, for the reason of the micromanagement.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
tell me about a time when [insert job-specific situation here]