I applied online. The process took 2 weeks. I interviewed at Live Your Life Physical Therapy (Minneapolis, MN)
Interview
We were going to meet at a local restaurant and the CEO was 30 mins late before showing up and ate dinner during it. Second interview she was 45 mins late and rushed through the last 15mins - only after she made me help her carry things in from her car and climb up 4 flights of stairs and then back down. I am a Certified Personal Trainer, but she expected me to have the knowledge of a physical therapy assistant.
I applied online. I interviewed at Live Your Life Physical Therapy
Interview
Had a phone interview and it was pretty standard regarding experience and types of clients previously trained. I was told I would talk to the owner to discuss hours and pay as a next step, but instead was asked to do an in-person interview. I asked if hours and pay could be discussed in general terms before an in-person meeting occurred to make sure our expectations were similar. I was then asked what I was expecting and said that I had been previously offered $20 an hour for personal training sessions and that my 20 years of experience meant I was making more at other locations. I didn’t hear back so I sent another follow-up email and didn’t hear back again. Seems like someone could have sent an email back to let me know my expectations for pay was out of their range instead of never responding. Company doesn’t seem professional in general as the in-person interview was to occur at the owner’s home.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Take me through your resume and experience, and what types of clients have you worked with? Any special populations?
I applied through an employee referral. The process took 1+ week. I interviewed at Live Your Life Physical Therapy (Champlin, MN) in Nov 2014
Interview
We met at the local Caribou. The first true interview was an hour and a half and answered about 15 questions. They were mostly behavioral. You need to answer true at the end we hugged. But pay was very low with hopes to get a raise in 90 days, which did not happen.