I applied to multiple software engineer roles at Ramp. There was a front-end decoding type puzzle to solve as part of the front end application and code signals for the other roles (I got perfect scores on all). Making applicants invest time into a technical challenge before being able to even speak to a recruiter was already a red flag. I didn't hear back from Ramp and signed on to a different company a couple of months later. I then received multiple emails from an internal recruiter saying they scouted out my profile and asking about my interest given the high fit with my background... Seems to me like their recruiting process is highly flawed if they're scouting out applicants as "great fits" after previously ghosting/rejecting them. Would recommend this company be avoided.
It started with take home question regarding flags. Then heard back from a recruiter a week later. Then never heard back unfortunately. Not sure if they have too many applicants
Conversation opened with a recruiter about a week after initial LinkedIn application. Recruiter asked me standard background questions, then asked me to tell her about a project and about what I was doing with AI.
One technical round after that, plus sounds like there would be a virtual onsite afterwards.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Fun and unusual problem, though the interview was much quieter than any technical interview I had experienced before. It felt closer to completing an online coding assessment while an interviewer silently observed.
The challenge involved making HTTP requests to “escape a maze.” You loaded a webpage containing links to connected child pages and traversed them to locate the exit. As the exercise progressed, additional response types, body formats, and URL schemes introduced new cases that had to be discovered and handled.
The interviewer provided very little clarification when I tried to discuss requirements, so the exercise appeared to be testing your ability to reverse engineer an unfamiliar system and adapt your design as new behavior emerged. I was also discouraged from consulting documentation, so I would recommend being comfortable using your language’s HTTP request library from memory.
My initial design assumed successful responses, and I later expanded it to support different response codes, bodies, and schemes. Overall, it was a creative problem, but candidates should expect limited communication and deliberately undisclosed requirements.
They only give you 3 days to take the test, which is very tight with work. Got a coding test, passed all the tests, and a week later got an automated rejection
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
on hashmaps and snapshotting with in-memory databases