I applied through an employee referral. The process took 2 weeks. I interviewed at PETA
Interview
Long and demanding. Prepare to have to write essays, submit a video, do a mock trial of a job that you haven't yet been trained to do, then fly to their headquarters (on your dime) to work a day or two, unpaid.
1
Other Corporate Liaison interview reviews for PETA
I applied online. I interviewed at PETA (Los Angeles, CA)
Interview
first it was via e-mail. I wrote short essay answers to questions that were on topics I would have worked on. Then I did a two-day working interview. That was intense and unpaid for but also gave a feel for the organization to better inform my decision as well.
The process took 4 weeks. I interviewed at PETA (Los Angeles, CA) in Nov 2011
Interview
There's a reason why PETA has 41 job openings in this period of high unemployment. After submitting a 30-minute online, application, I was assigned two "test projects." Extremely time consuming and research intensive, probably took me 30 or 35 hours, and I'm sure they will use the projects, so I should have charged them a consultant's fee. Next, I was interviewed via phone for an hour. Passed that hurdle and then had to do a "mock corporate meeting" via Skype. Did very well on that, and received an email later that day inviting me to LA for the "final step" of the process. That involved working for two days as a volunteer. But the real kicker is that they insisted I pay for my own hotel and airfare to LA ! I live on the East Coast. I felt as though I'd been scammed, and my desire to work for PETA was snuffed. This is a job that involves "extensive travel," so I wonder why they don't have frequent flier miles for applicants they want to bring to LA. I can't imagine what it would be like to work for an organization that places such little value on people's time and effort.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
What company would you target on animal welfare issues and why?