I applied online. The process took 1 week. I interviewed at Power Home Remodeling (Denver, CO) in Feb 2017
Interview
Now that it is apparent that I will not get the job, here it goes. So I did a phone interview with Patrick in Pennsylvania. That went excellent. He set me up for an interview at the Denver office. The "interview" at the Denver office consisted of about 3 questions from my past, none of which allowed me to sell myself to the interviewer. It was more about having me watch 2-3 videos about how wonderful it would be at Power. Here's the thing. It seemed that everyone who works at power was a chiseled 9-10, fresh out of a Barbie box, and that's not how I look. Not only that but I already had 3 other companies have me watch a series of videos only to then ask me for an "investment" to proceed. So it's my fault that my attitude changed once we got to the 2nd or 3rd video, as I was really expecting the next video to tell me how much it would cost to join Power. There are lots of scams out there that advertise themselves as "jobs". In retrospect, I don't think Power was a scam, but I wasn't offered a job
Interview questions [3]
Question 1
Of the few questions I was asked, one of them was how much did I want to make?
I applied online. I interviewed at Power Home Remodeling (Chester, PA) in May 2015
Interview
I found it difficult to understand what the job fully entailed until actually arriving in the interview with the head of the Sales and Marketing Department. The office environment and employees I encountered on the day of my interview were equally pleasant.
I applied through other source. The process took 2 weeks. I interviewed at Power Home Remodeling (Philadelphia, PA) in Mar 2017
Interview
I've had a relationship with Power for about two years. They previously offered me a job which I declined. They reached out this time asking if I'd be interested in helping them expand their team. We restarted the interview process; I sent them samples and went in for a sit down. After that, they asked me to write unique samples for their company. They liked the samples and invited me to meet with their brand-new public relations VP. The position I was considered for would have some overlap, so interviewing with the new VP made sense, although I wouldn't be working directly for her (my position would have been marketing communications). That's where the process stopped and they went with a candidate who had NYC agency experience. It seemed as though the new VP made the final call, which felt a bit unfair as she was new (had been working there for mere days) and in a different department; however, I can't know for sure she made the decision. The email I received notifying me about their decision was rather generic, so I followed that with an email to my primary contact--the VP of marketing Comm. Although this didn't work out in my favor, we left it on a good note. I was asked to touch base in a few months, as they'll try to have something for me then. Truly a great company, even without an offer.