I applied through a recruiter. I interviewed at Arm (Austin, TX)
Interview
The interview consisted of a Phone screen, then 2 technical rounds after that. The interviewers seem reasonable. The interview mostly consisted of C questions, bit and string manipulation, array related questions, static, volatile, work experience related questions
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
C bit manipulation questions, string questions basic leet code questons, tons of whats wrong in the code snippet questions
I applied through a recruiter. The process took 2 weeks. I interviewed at Arm (Bristol, Angleterre) in Sep 2025
Interview
The interview process is tailored more for a grad rather than a senior. The interview panel didn’t acknowledge the fact that I've already been in the industry for 10 years working on complex systems with High Performance SoC's and for past 3years not been working as extensively at chip level. i.e. catching system exception, analysing disassembly, rather our company already has a error trap API which has similar function.
One of the question, how would I create a memory management unit in software. I gave my conceptual implementation how this would involve memory address check, boundaries and tlb function in software. Also I mentioned that it would be painfully slow and hamper the core. They weren't convinced of the details I've given.
Some questions were trying intentionally trying to intimidate you. Like where would I use volatile?, where variable should not be optimized. I gave an example of ADC converter, peripheral status registers where hardware can modify the bits. They weren't convinced.
Question about interrupt latency? What's counts as full latency?
I've explained about from
-MSB synchronisation of any ongoing instruction,
- saving the background task's stack onto the registers so foreground can load its registers on the stack,
- Handler fetching the ISR from a memory address,
-Completion and unloading of foreground's stack.
They didn’t look convinced.
One question that did trip me, regarding security encryption process on embedded devices, i.e. secure boot, hashing, RSA etc.
I explained the process to the best of my knowledge but I believe it was quite shallow. I acknowledged I haven't worked as extensively on the embedded devices security side of things even though secure embedded development is listed in my CV.
Questions about trust zone?
Again I explained the overall process that its a hardware controlled process I’ve talked about my experience working with trustzone on zynq 7000, how we assert certain bit in a register to grant access to peripherals, memory access etc.
They weren’t convinced, wanted the name of the register and the specific bits which I couldn’t remember on top of my head.
The panel didn’t look at the overall skills, knowledge and external attributes like attitude under pressure. Overall the process felt like they're looking for generic number to fill a seat rather than an engineer for an specialised domain who can bring innovation and creativity.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Interrupt latency
Trustzone
Secure boot
Volatile keyword use cases.
Thank you for sharing your feedback. As a matter of policy, we do not respond publicly to interview reviews in order to protect the confidentiality of both candidates and interviewers. However, we take all feedback seriously and use it to refine our recruitment processes. If you believe you were treated unfairly or did not have the opportunity to share your perspective, we encourage you to contact us directly at globalrecruitmentenquiries@arm.com so we can look into the matter further.
I applied online. I interviewed at Arm (Birmingham, Angleterre) in Feb 2017
Interview
There were 2-3 rounds of interview, had interview with 2 teams one at Cambridge and one at loughborough. I felt interview was not aimed at recruitment. I am not sure but the process was not at all in a ethical manner. Why would you interview a person with not in a aim of recruitment but just want to learn what he has done.? the Interview is a time pass and eye wash process