First: Interview Difficulty
Very Easy (because nothing about this process was demanding — except their audacity)
Interview Process Length
1–2 weeks of vague “we’ll discuss and get back to you” energy
This interview felt like a beautifully packaged bait-and-switch.
The recruiter was friendly and a junior, yes — but the process itself was basically:
1. Sell you the brand
2. Sell you the culture
3. Mention “Always Be Shipping” ten times
4. Then casually slide in a salary offer that belongs in another decade
They introduce Mollie as a fast-growing fintech with ambition, agility, AI, expansion, etc. Great.
But the role itself? It’s a standard frontline support job:
• live phone support + chat + email
• channel switching on demand
• technical payment-related troubleshooting
• handling merchants under stress
• shift schedule
• queue work
• escalations
Nothing wrong with support work — but don’t wrap it in “high performance culture” branding like it’s a leadership pipeline. It’s a ticket factory with a sleek logo.
The Salary (aka the moment the interview became comedy)
Let’s talk numbers.
€19,000/year (paid over 14 months) for a German-speaking role in Lisbon.
No serious language bonus.
No meaningful upside.
Just “benefits” presented as if they’re a Rolex.
You cannot pretend you’re hiring “international talent” and then offer compensation that screams:
“We want premium output at budget prices.”
It’s fintech cosplay. A luxury brand mindset with bargain-bin pay.
On-site Expectation (for €19k, please be serious)
They proudly explain that the first months are essentially on-site (5 days/week), and only after that you may access hybrid (3 office / 2 home).
For €19k, asking an experienced candidate to commute and sit in-office full time to answer tickets is not “culture.”
It’s control.
And it’s insulting.
Benefits
They highlight:
• meal vouchers
• wellness budget
• small WFH/travel allowances
• health insurance
• pension scheme
Fine. Standard. Not revolutionary.
It does not change the fact that the base salary is low to the point of being unserious.
A wellness budget does not compensate for underpaying multilingual labour. A massage doesn’t pay rent.
What this interview actually taught me
• The recruiter is competent.
• Mollie is clearly trying to scale Lisbon.
• But the compensation strategy is:
“Let’s see who will accept this.”
And that’s the problem.
They frame the job as “entry-level.”
Then why target profiles with years of operational experience and multilingual skillsets?
Pick a lane.
Either:
• hire entry-level candidates and stop pretending you’re selecting “high-performance operators,”
or
• pay like a company that respects the value it’s demanding.
Final Verdict
This process feels like being asked to fly business class energy on an economy ticket.
If you’re:
• young
• starting out
• just want a fintech name on your CV
…then maybe it’s fine.
If you’re:
• experienced
• multilingual
• used to real operational ownership
…this will feel like someone asking you to do premium work for peanuts — politely.
Pros
• recruiter was pleasant and structured
• company brand is strong
• role description is clear (once you strip the marketing)
Cons
• extremely low salary for German-speaking support
• heavy on-site expectation for low pay
• culture slogans used to oversell a standard support job
• no compelling growth path communicated beyond vague “maybe after 6 months SME program”