The hiring process is long and drawn out. You submit your résumé which then gets filtered. If yours makes it through the filter it goes to the hiring manager who then down selects and does an informal screening. It depends on the job position and manager but for most they are very informal and just helps them get a first pass to see if they even want to talk to you. Then they down select again for the formal interview. This is in person with a panel of people. I think 3 is minimum. They will ask a series of probably 4-7 questions that are situational so "when was a time when you experienced...?". Those require you to give a scenario and explain the process you went though but you won't be asked specific technical questions such as working a problem. At this point the manager either makes their final decision or could bring people in for one last round (mostly for dev positions). HR is slow and so it can take a while after the manager decides they want you to the time you get the offer.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Tell us about a time when you had to analyze data to come to a conclusion. What was the situation what actions did you take and what was the outcome?
Applied online to job req. Emailed with interview date/time.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
All were very standard questions. Required to provide answers in STAR format. Interviews rate you on these answers. You're marked down if you do not follow this format.
Five behavioral questions. Compiled a list of questions from Glassdoor, none of them got asked but was a good way to practice. Don't forget the STAR method and try to use stories that showcase relevant experience (business analysis, technical, etc).
Group interview where you solve a business problem with other candidates. It's not important to come up with the "right" solution -- they are mostly observing to see whether or not you can play nicely with others.
Interaction with HR and the hiring team was rigid and unfriendly -- felt like a number, not a person they want to convince to come work for them. Hard to get questions answered.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
None -- straightforward, standard behavioral questions