I applied through a recruiter. The process took 4 weeks. I interviewed at Forrester
Interview
Just as outlined on the company website, the hiring process for a research / analyst role (any level) requires several interviews - some phone, some in-person - and a writing assignment you do with the hiring manager. If you're selected to continue from there, you'll make a presentation to a number of people in various roles - some will attend in person, others via video con or WebEx.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Background and experience questions. Good, intense and challenging questions, asking for your point of view on industry and topics relevant to the role. You'll give your POV - expect additional probing. You'll get some "suppose you were in this situation" questions, asking "what would you do?" The expectation is that you are quick on your feet, give clear "real examples," and definitive. Expect to get pushback on your answers - primarily to see how you handle that. If you've ever interviewed for management or strategy consulting, you know the drill. If you have not, do some prep on that approach.
I applied online. The process took 6 weeks. I interviewed at Forrester in Jul 2015
Interview
The interview process was long, intense, and quite thorough. This may scare some applicants off, but it actually allowed me to "try on" the role before actually taking it. In other interview processes, you talk about the role and your own capabilities. In this process, I go to do the job and Forrester got the vet my capabilities.
It started with a phone interview with the recruiter, then a phone interview with the hiring manager. Then, I believe I interviewed with several other members of the team. Once I got through that round, I was tasked with writing a brief, which is an Analyst's chief responsibility at Forrester. When I finished and submitted that, I flew to Cambridge to present my report to the team in person.
Yes, it was a long process, but the selection process is so important to employers and candidates that I think it was totally worthwhile.
Interview questions [4]
Question 1
1. What are some areas you would like to research?
I applied through an employee referral. The process took 2 months. I interviewed at Forrester (Cambridge, MA) in Jun 2015
Interview
It's very involved, but that has been documented elsewhere, and they explain it on the careers section of their website. Essentially you end up pouring about a month of sr analyst work into the process, after the interviews writing a sample analyst report, and then defending it in a presentation. My point though is that after getting excellent feedback on all steps, and me pouring a month work over a two month period into the process, they changed their minds on whether my experience was sufficient for the target audience of their team. The teams at Forrester seem very siloed, yet my experience fit right between two teams. So if that's your situation, think twice whether you want to engage in this process.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
What are the biggest challenges marketing organizations face these days?