Ir para o conteúdoIr para a pasta
  • Vagas
  • Empresas
  • Salários
  • Para empresas

      Avance em sua carreira

      Descubra qual pode ser seu salário, conquiste a vaga dos seus sonhos e compartilhe insights de qualidade de vida com sigilo.

      employer cover photo

      MAP Retirement

      Essa empresa é sua?

      Sobre
      Avaliações
      Remuneração e benefícios
      Vagas
      Entrevistas
      Entrevistas
      Buscas relacionadas: Avaliações da empresa MAP Retirement | Vagas da empresa MAP Retirement | Salários da empresa MAP Retirement | Benefícios da empresa MAP Retirement
      Entrevistas da empresa MAP Retirement Entrevistas do cargo de Relationship Manager da empresa MAP Retirement Entrevista da empresa MAP Retirement


      Glassdoor

      • Sobre
      • Prêmios
      • Blog
      • Fale conosco

      Empresas

      • Conta gratuita de empresa
      • Área da empresa
      • Blog para empresas

      Informações

      • Ajuda
      • Regras da Comunidade
      • Termos de Uso
      • Privacidade e opções de anúncios
      • Não venda nem compartilhe minhas informações
      • Ferramenta de consentimento de uso de cookies

      Trabalhe conosco

      • Anunciantes
      • Carreiras
      Baixe o aplicativo:

      • Busque por:
      • Empresas
      • Vagas
      • Localizações

      Copyright © 2008-2026. Glassdoor LLC. “Glassdoor”, “Worklife Pro”, “Bowls” e o logotipo do Glassdoor são marcas comerciais pertencentes à Glassdoor LLC.

      Empresas seguidas

      Fique por dentro de todas as oportunidades e dicas internas seguindo as empresas de seus sonhos.

      Buscas de vagas

      Comece a buscar vagas para receber atualizações e recomendações personalizadas.

      Entrevista para Relationship Manager

      10 de mai. de 2026
      Candidato(a) sigiloso(a) à entrevista
      Oferta recusada
      Experiência negativa
      Entrevista difícil

      Candidatura

      Fui entrevistado pela MAP Retirement em fev. de 2026

      Entrevista

      Easily one of the most arrogant, disorganized, and self-unaware interview processes I have experienced. The entire process revolved around obsessing over tiny, hyper-specific procedural gaps that were unique to their own internal way of doing things, not broad retirement industry concepts, not core compliance knowledge, and not actual indicators of whether someone can succeed in the role. These were niche workflow preferences and company-specific nuances that any experienced retirement professional could learn almost immediately. What was astonishing was the complete inability of the interview team to recognize this. There was such an inflated sense of importance attached to their own internal processes that they seemed genuinely incapable of distinguishing between “this person lacks industry knowledge” and “this person has not yet memorized our exact internal preferences.” Those are very different things. Instead of evaluating adaptability, intelligence, operational judgment, client skills, or nearly a decade of directly relevant experience, the process devolved into a bizarre exercise of nitpicking microscopic details while simultaneously forgetting prior interviews, prior conversations, and prior context entirely. The irony was hard to ignore. A company so hyper-focused on tiny technicalities could not even maintain basic continuity in its own hiring process. At multiple points it honestly felt like nobody knew what had already been discussed, who had interviewed me previously, or what stage the process was even in. Conversations became repetitive, timelines dragged endlessly, communication was inconsistent, and there was little evidence of internal coordination whatsoever. What stood out most was the staggering lack of self-awareness. The process projected an attitude of superiority while demonstrating some of the most scattered and forgetful interview management I have encountered. Candidates were expected to be perfect, immediately knowledgeable about every obscure internal preference, and endlessly patient while the company itself could not manage something as basic as organized communication or remembering previous interviews. The experience ultimately came across as a company more interested in protecting its own ego and rigid checklists than identifying capable professionals who could learn quickly, contribute immediately, and grow within the role.

      Perguntas de entrevista [1]

      Pergunta 1

      Easily one of the most arrogant, disorganized, and self-unaware interview processes I have experienced. The entire process revolved around obsessing over tiny, hyper-specific procedural gaps that were unique to their own internal way of doing things, not broad retirement industry concepts, not core compliance knowledge, and not actual indicators of whether someone can succeed in the role. These were niche workflow preferences and company-specific nuances that any experienced retirement professional could learn almost immediately. What was astonishing was the complete inability of the interview team to recognize this. There was such an inflated sense of importance attached to their own internal processes that they seemed genuinely incapable of distinguishing between “this person lacks industry knowledge” and “this person has not yet memorized our exact internal preferences.” Those are very different things. Instead of evaluating adaptability, intelligence, operational judgment, client skills, or nearly a decade of directly relevant experience, the process devolved into a bizarre exercise of nitpicking microscopic details while simultaneously forgetting prior interviews, prior conversations, and prior context entirely. The irony was hard to ignore. A company so hyper-focused on tiny technicalities could not even maintain basic continuity in its own hiring process. At multiple points it honestly felt like nobody knew what had already been discussed, who had interviewed me previously, or what stage the process was even in. Conversations became repetitive, timelines dragged endlessly, communication was inconsistent, and there was little evidence of internal coordination whatsoever. What stood out most was the staggering lack of self-awareness. The process projected an attitude of superiority while demonstrating some of the most scattered and forgetful interview management I have encountered. Candidates were expected to be perfect, immediately knowledgeable about every obscure internal preference, and endlessly patient while the company itself could not manage something as basic as organized communication or remembering previous interviews. The experience ultimately came across as a company more interested in protecting its own ego and rigid checklists than identifying capable professionals who could learn quickly, contribute immediately, and grow within the role.
      Responder à pergunta

      As melhores empresas na categoria “Remuneração e benefícios” perto de você

      avatar
      Goldman Sachs
      3.6★Remuneração e benefícios
      avatar
      Morgan Stanley
      3.6★Remuneração e benefícios
      ABB
      4.3★Remuneração e benefícios
      avatar
      EBRD
      3.8★Remuneração e benefícios