There wasn't really one. It was more like a one way talking where they just tell you how things are. They don't take any feedback or look at any of your qualifications or skills.
Even if you are technically very strong and bring lot of skills, they will reject you because of their internal bias. They just don’t want to hire anyone who is not a Caucasian. They made me do a project, presentation and wasted a lot of my time but rejected based on behavioral questions. If they were not going to make a decision based on my project, why waste my precious time? Maybe they wanted to get some free work done for their project and I was just a scapegoat. They had done behavioral questions in screening round itself so what was the need to proceed if they did not like me? They only do behavioral interviews multiple times because probably they think since you belong to a different race, you will behave like a wild animal. This was to a person who has worked in high technology companies in the US for more than 15 years. Do you really think an experienced person doesn't know how to behave at work or with colleagues? They knew they couldn't reject based on technical skills so they had multiple rounds of behavioral where everyone keeps asking the same question phrased differently - can you behave like a civilized person?
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
They work on only outdated technology and many people in the company is there from 25 years so they don't know what is happening outside. You will definitely be more knowledgeable than them technically.
I applied online. I interviewed at SAS (Cary, NC) in Sep 2025
Interview
Where to start:
I had the displeasure of interviewing for a SAS Software Engineer position and went through multiple rounds, including a coding assessment. The process was extremely disrespectful. I was given a simple coding question, which I solved correctly in Python, a language I am fluent in. During the final interview, the interviewer explicitly said I could choose any language I wanted—but they themselves were unfamiliar with basic Python concepts, such as dictionaries and variable swapping.
Throughout the interview, the interviewer repeatedly stated that they did not care about time complexity, efficiency, or syntax, yet they did not ask any follow-up questions to probe or understand my solution. Despite my correct solution, I was told it “was not what they were looking for,” even though there was no way to run or verify the code. This felt biased and unprofessional. What they should have done was acknowledge my fluency with the language and its libraries, and my ability to write code that handles edge cases efficiently. I explained my thought process, walked through each line of code with an example test case, and concluded with the time complexity of my solution. Yet the interviewer remained silent and extremely critical, as if it was my fault they could not understand my code. They also claimed my solution was overly complex, even though it was correct. Subjective judgments like this have no place in a technical interview.
After the final round, I was ghosted by the recruiter, receiving no follow-up communication for over two weeks—even after I reached out asking for feedback and updates.
Overall, the interview process was inconsistent, the feedback contradictory, and the interviewer lacked the necessary knowledge to fairly evaluate my solution. The ghosting was also incredibly disrespectful. I am someone who has solved thousands of LeetCode questions, and being treated this way is simply inhumane.