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
      employer logo
      employer logo

      TransUnion

      Empresa engajada

      Sobre
      Avaliações
      Remuneração e benefícios
      Vagas
      Entrevistas
      Entrevistas
      Buscas relacionadas: Avaliações da empresa TransUnion | Vagas da empresa TransUnion | Salários da empresa TransUnion | Benefícios da empresa TransUnion
      Entrevistas da empresa TransUnionEntrevistas do cargo de Senior Linux Administrator da empresa TransUnionEntrevista da empresa TransUnion


      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 Senior Linux Administrator

      12 de set. de 2013
      Candidato(a) sigiloso(a) à entrevista
      Atlanta, GA
      Nenhuma oferta
      Experiência negativa
      Entrevista fácil

      Candidatura

      Candidatei-me online. O processo levou mais de 1 semana. Fui entrevistado pela TransUnion (Atlanta, GA) em set. de 2013

      Entrevista

      Well I tried to come with a good single word to describe this employer and its interview process but the best I can come up with is: classless. This site seems to be both lacking in hospitality, people skills, and enterprise level accumen. First of all HR failed to mention that when you arrive at the building you are not greeted in the lobby but expected to know to schlep up to the 16th or 17th floor to be let in by the receptionist at by speaking into an intercom inconspicuously placed on the wall by the door. This is your first warning sign a lack of normal hospitality. It is like you just started a really bad RPG and you are trying to figure out how to get to your interview with little or no clues. A second warning to me was the building they are in is dirty, dingy, and old. Looks like you just stepped into a time-warp that has thrown you back 30 years. The carpet looks like it was last replaced in the 60's or there about. Out of all the nice buildings in Buckhead Atlanta this appears to be the worst. The lobby is passable but just barely. The manager I interviewed with must have been a hardcore technical person as I have rarely seen so someone in a management role who appeared to be so devoid of people skills. Not only were they not going to ask about validating parking for the building's garage but they seemed disturbed when I asked. Never seen a company too cheap to cover parking. Well then there are the cubes -- would an animal even be placed in a space so small today? Probably not without being set upon by the ASPCA in a moments notice. So second warning is treating people with little respect or class. Warning #3 is that the expect their Unix/Linux admin to cover Windows on-call rotations. I don't know about you but I do Unix/Linux for a reason -- it is not Windows. So if you want to be cleaning Windows then this is the job for you/ My advice is just reboot them every morning at 7 am. :-) The fourth reason is that all the direction seems to be provided above the manager level and that never is good for a team of Unix/Linux Admin to be driven by remote control by suit at corporate. I suspect the manager of the team was a Windows guy since his questions were esoteric to the job at hand. I have done "the Windows admin as a manager" deal a number of times and prefer either a professional manager or a former U/L guy. At this point I would rather clean toilets. Former Windows guys usually don't know how to deal with day to day admin of U/L. So it was clear to me the direction is clearly not local to that manager. The fifth and final reason to avoid this job is that all the folks I talked with seemed homegrown with little external enterprise experience. Essentially a group of folks who have never seen the outside world and were promoted into the position not due to merit and aptitude but due having been a friend of a friend. There questions were both sophomoric and laughable and they seemed to want to challenge even the most ridiculous items. They even have the audacity to act as if their line of question is monolithic when it really isn't. It is just the way they do it at that site and it just proves my theory they are very short sighted here and perhaps indicative of the company as a whole. So if you are a U/L person my advice for you is pass on the local interview in favor of some other nicer company in the area. There seems to be no shortage of other U/L positions. This is of course all my opinion and provided as warning to others who might be offered an interview here.

      Perguntas de entrevista [1]

      Pergunta 1

      N/A None were difficult. Most were inane and were indicative of no interview training or the sited lacked communicated HR processes. At this point you have been technically questioned at least 2 times before.
      Responder à pergunta
      4