| I joined Google last year, hired directly as a manager. Germane to this thread, I'm in my early 40s. At Google, the bar is that you are expected to be able to contribute as an equivalently senior IC, but will be expected to use those skills to inform how you do manager stuff. So you will definitely get technical questions, the type of which will vary slightly depending on which level of management you're interviewing for. But they will be legit technical questions, like solving a graph theory problem or designing a distributed system. In addition, you'll also get explicit sessions probing you on your leadership style and management fundamentals. Standard behavioral stuff. Non CS background doesn't seem to matter as much as actual leadership experience afaict. Formal leadership roles seem to be weighted more strongly when considering your level, but you do seem to get some credit for informal roles too. I'm not super sure on this point. I think it'd be hard to go directly as an external IC to a manager role. That's not a risk I'd personally want to take if I were the hiring manager in that situation. If it helps you calibrate, I had about 6 years experience as a line manager at other companies, and I was considered for (and hired as) a line manager. I was never being considered as a 2nd level manager of managers. hth. |
Also is the technical bar lower? And do they care at all about having done business school?