I applied online. The process took 4 weeks. I interviewed at Amazon Web Services (Irvine, CA) in Jul 2023
Interview
A fairly long interview process, a total of 8 various interviews, ranging from technical to behavioral and one online asessment. Everyone was extremely pleasant and professional during every single interview, a truly remarkable level of professionalism, which I have not seen before from other companies. I basically burned myself out with prepping too hard and slept too little right before my loop, which caused me to freeze during my whiteboarding exercise, and on a question, which I practiced not only the night before, but literally before the interview. Anyway, I know better now. I will say that having a loop of 5-6 interviews does provide a better faceted view of the candidate, but also introduces additional points of bias, intentional or not, which might play a part in the decision making. Passing 3 technical interviews is not enough, if you dont pass your 4th, fyi.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
All kinds of questions, covering the services in AWS, and the leadership principles of course. Make sure you have at least 2 STAR - stories per Leadership Principle (yes, I know, that makes at least 20-25 well-written and perfected stories) and practice them like hell. Also, make sure you practice your whiteboarding skills, as well as the usual technical questions: - SQL vs. NoSQL - RTO vs. RPO - What is JSON - Why Amazon - Tell me about yourself
I applied through a recruiter. I interviewed at Amazon Web Services (Bangkok) in Mar 2026
Interview
1. Passed the online assessment. Consists of multiple customer centric question. The emphasis is about AWS product knowledge with the tone aiming more towards pre sales scenario. Several scenarios about debugging and advising the clients. Keep in mind their mentality "Customer Obsession" Because it will lead to successfully pass the assessment. The assessment is not proctored. You can make use of google to help yourself. But the thinking seems to be based on this mentality:
"will it reduce costs for customers? Will it be simple to implement? "
Example: "Customer asked: We announced a christmas sales-discount. We don't know why our web traffic is slowing down. What should we do?"
2. Phone-Screening
- Had an Interview with a senior architect from their house in SEA. I believe one of their celebrity engineer/architect L7 or above.
The person will be announced via email. Check the persons linkedin, it's website etc. in order to find out what character you might encounter.
- Attention: You can prepare the hell out of you, coding, high level architecture or behavioral questions etc. At the end it comes how much luck you have, bc it depends on who will interview you and what level of knowledge you have about AWS.
I rehearsed the behavioral interview and how to explain system design by speaking with AI until exhaustion. I crunched 8 nights, while my toddler was sick. During the interview I found out that it didn't matter much.
I was asked to walk through pipelines and structures how it can be translated to AWS products.
- For example load balancing and hashing with EC2 nodes, Throughput criteria in S3 storages, Metadata writings in Dynamodb etc. Questions like that.
- My interviewer was not fluffing, pushed strong and were a mix of rapid fire question and going deep in the rabbit hole. He gave me the choice, either via a zoom whiteboard, a presentation, or vocally.
I want to be fair. I was very nervous. The interview was professional, You really cannot predict what kind of interview you will encounter. It can be a friendly one, a story telling behavioral or a pure technical dive. Not all of them at once. Just be prepared.
I did not pass. But I hope my comment helps. Wishing others best of luck.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Can you walk me through the complete RAG sequence and how to scale it to millions of user? We don't use notebooks anymore. And how would you coordinate this with 50 Data Scientists?
I interviewed at Amazon Web Services (Seattle, WA)
Interview
Several initial screens by recruiters validating my experience and resume.
Then a circuit of 5 interviewers in the same day lasting over 5 hours. When I was done I was offered a different job from the one for which I had interviewed.
I interviewed at Amazon Web Services (Londres, Inglaterra)
Interview
The Amazon loop is an unusual process that is exhausting. It involves meeting a series of interviewers over a day, each of which has a different perspective. Mine was all remote, performed from the comfort of my home whilst the interviewers were largely US based.