I applied through college or university. The process took 2 weeks. I interviewed at RSM (New York, NY) in Jan 2013
Interview
Was introduced to company through job fair. Had one phone interview which was simple and easy and 2 part face-to-face interview. The interviewers were very kind and I was relaxed throughout the process.
Was introduced to company through job fair. Had one phone interview which was simple and easy and 2 part face-to-face interview. The interviewers were very kind and I was relaxed throughout the process.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Only had 3.3 overall GPA and they asked me why they should take me as an intern rather than someone with a higher GPA.
I applied through college or university. The process took 4 weeks. I interviewed at RSM (Denver, CO) in Oct 2012
Interview
The interview process was surprisingly fun. I really liked that McGladrey was a big firm, but was still small enough where everyone actually knew each other.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
The interview was actually pretty low key, we mainly talked about the NHL lockout and what to expect in public accounting.
I applied through college or university. The process took 2 weeks. I interviewed at RSM (Tysons Corner, VA) in Oct 2012
Interview
Did a first round of interviews at my school, they got back to me quickly (within a few days) and invited me up to their office in Vienna/Tyson's Corner for a final round of interviews. On the day of my final interviews, they provided transportation from my school for me and 10 other students in the form of a Hummer Limo. We got there and had breakfast and introductions, then did two approximately 30-45 minute interviews. Usually one is with a newer, lower-level employee and the other with an upper-level manager/director/partner etc. Then, we were given a quick tour and lunch before finally leaving. The people were all awesome. I received the formal offer 3 hours later and accepted....best experience ever by far!
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
The interviews were not difficult, mine were simply one-on-one and conversational. However, if you aren't prepared with a lot of questions and aren't able to ad lib off of their responses, you might struggle. Be comfortable and confident, but also give clear and definitive responses. Don't say you'll do anything they want, say you want audit or tax and even profit/non-profit if you want it. Also, if you want the job ASK FOR IT. At the end of my interview I gave a little last pitch about how I really wanted the position and that they were my number 1 choice (but only say it if you mean it, which i did).