About Interviews:
An interview is a direct conversation between the interviewer and the candidate. During this interaction, you may be asked about your education, skills, strengths, projects, and overall background.
With the rise of remote hiring after COVID-19, many companies now conduct interviews online in addition to traditional in-person formats.
During the hiring process, interviews generally fall into three main categories:
After clearing the online assessment, you may face different interview combinations based on the company’s hiring process:
Each company follows its own sequence depending on their requirements.
Use the STAR method when answering behavioral interview questions. This structure helps you give clear, organized, and impactful explanations:
Generally, companies—especially those hiring for engineering, science, or technology roles—conduct Technical Interviews during the recruitment process.
These interviews usually last 30 to 60 minutes, depending on the company and role.
A technical round is often considered one of the most challenging stages because you’re expected to demonstrate your skills, not just talk about them. It’s all about showing your knowledge through real examples, logic, and problem-solving.
A technical interview is conducted when you apply for a technology or engineering-related role.
The questions can be unpredictable, but the purpose remains the same:
👉 “Is this candidate a good fit for our team and the job?”
Technical interviews can be held over a phone call, online video meeting, or face-to-face.
Depending on the company—such as Capgemini, TCS, Wipro, Infosys, etc.—the interview may last anywhere from an hour to a full-day multi-round process.
The questions you get depend heavily on your branch or specialization:
Freshers are usually tested on fundamental concepts from these areas:
Capgemini, in particular, is known for asking scenario-based questions along with basics from DBMS, OOPS, and Java or any language you mention.
Capgemini HR Interview
The HR round is more or less the final round that you need to clear before joining a company.
“Although not as difficult as the preceding rounds it sometimes turns out to be trickier than the others.”
This round judges you not on your skills as much as it does on your personality.
The HR evaluates your strengths, weaknesses, leadership quality, background, and most importantly whether you will be an asset for the company or not.
Hence you need to prepare well for this round.