Take-Home Test: The process starts with a take-home test, which is extremely demanding. You are expected to build a production-ready application with thorough documentation just to advance to the next stage.
First Technical Interview: If you pass the take-home test, the first interview focuses on your submitted project. You will be asked about your approach and may be asked to make small changes to your code.
On-Site Interviews: There are five interviews scheduled in a single day. The first is with the hiring manager, followed by a coding interview, a frontend system design interview, an interview with a product design team member, and then another session with the hiring manager.
I went through all the stages, and I found the take-home test to be particularly demanding. I spent over a week building the project, and just meeting the minimum requirements won’t be enough to pass—you have to go above and beyond.
During the system design interview, the interviewers seemed unprepared and asked vague, open-ended questions. If your answers don’t align with what they have in mind, you may be rejected, even if you're technically strong. At one point, the interviewer was even Googling questions during the interview. Lastly, the hiring manager was not very engaging—he barely asked any questions and seemed to expect me to drive the conversation.
PS: if you have a lot of time to spend on take home test even before speaking to someone then apply to this company