I applied online. I interviewed at Vodafone (Newbury, England) in Jan 2017
Interview
normal pace, took around a month to get to the final stage.
Though i did really good.
Their feedback was terrible. comments such as i was too technical? that i don't understand as I applied to a technology scheme... so my advice, not to be so technical when applying for a technical role. Doesnt make sense to me either.. but looks like it was just an excuse.
Hi, thanks for getting in touch. We're sorry you're unhappy with the quality of feedback you received at your interview. Despite this being a Technology Graduate Programme, we are recruiting for technology leaders rather than hands-on technical people. This could explain the feedback that was given to you. If you'd like to discuss this further, please email Nick.Thompson@vodafone.com and we'll be happy to answer any questions you might have.
I applied through a recruiter. I interviewed at Vodafone
Interview
Skipped the application and psychometric testing. Video Interview was ok but a bit nervewracking if its your first time. Cannot redo and do not get any feedback. Waited for a long time after being told I was initially successful to then be told I wasn't. I then got rung up and asked to come to an assessment day which they would not pay for travel expenses so I had to decline.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
If you were in a lift with the CEO what would you ask and why
Hello and thank you for taking the time to leave a review. We are sorry that you have listed this review as a bad experience but we would like to reassure you that we are working on our interview process every day. We want to make sure that our candidates go through the best interview experience. Good luck with your future endeavors!
The application was very easy and the video interview was better than a few others I had done.
I got through to the assessment centre and this was when I got a bad feeling about the company. Even though Vodafone is a huge, multi-million pounds corporation they still did not offer to reimburse any money whatsoever towards travel expenses. The day cost me £100 because the day started at 10am and because my university is far away I had to stay in a hotel the night before and the train was very expensive because they only gave less than a week's notice. This meant that I could hardly even afford food for the next few weeks. Vodafone could have just offered to pay a just £20 contribution and I'd have been happy. I have done interviews with tiny startups and they have always reimbursed a part of the travel expenses. This suggested that Vodafone would have been a pretty stingy company to work for.
The assessment day itself was exhausting and brutal. They had a group task to start with where you were expected to read around 50 pages of notes in 5 minutes and then discuss this with your group. The group had around 8 people and a few boys wouldn't stop speaking or let others speak - it was very difficult to get a word in edgeways. We then had to give a group presentation on a very complex issue with virtually no time to prepare.
The individual presentation and interview were okay, except they concentrated far too much on examples of customer satisfaction when the role I applied for would have no interaction with customers - very odd.