I applied online. The process took 4 weeks. I interviewed at Anheuser-Busch InBev (Ciudad Ho Chi Minh) in Nov 2016
Interview
The hiring process contains CV screening, 3 online tests, offline test, face-to-face interview, assessment center, and final interview. The offline test was interesting, it was a business case that you have to choose to launch 2 out of 6 seasonal beer products. The case was not so complicated comparing to other big companies like Unilever or P&G, the material was only around 10 single pages. The tip here is not to worry about the right or wrong answer and take too much time to think about the selection, just give it a logical and good reasons for your choice. I stopped at the face-to-face interview, and it was not a good experience. The interviewer was a newcomer and he asked me only 2 questions to make decisions, I thought it was my fault at introducing myself too humble at first as naively believed that I had chances to show off more after that. So the lesson here is to "polish" your introduction as one great first impression or you will say goodbye to the company soon.
Interview questions [2]
Question 1
What is the toughest feedback that you have ever received?
I applied online. The process took 5 weeks. I interviewed at Anheuser-Busch InBev (Milán) in Nov 2016
Interview
A tone of recruitment steps and tests online, when you finally get the interview on the phone it's also outsourced to Cielo Talent, you still have absolutely no contact with the actual company.
First it's 12 (!!) behavioral question about yourself in different situations. Furthermore, the "recruiter" is not allowed to interpret the question for me or to discuss it together with me, so I'm wondering: why don't they just o video interview since they want to be so cheap on recruitment!
They ask a lot (actually most of the questions) about persistence-determination-stress resistance-resilience-endurance, and those are the only thing they look in a personality. This kind of raised a red flag in my opinion, as the kind of people they are probably looking for should only have those.
When you finally get through this stage, you have to do a business case online. They email you an 11-page case study and since that moment you have 30 mins to read it, analyze it, do calculations (their tables don't translate properly into excel, it's a pain in the rear), and propose a strategy + a marketing plan.
I'm pretty sure that the ones who get through this stage are the ones who actually get the case study before hands through other sources, as in that time you definitely can't make a reasonable decision taking into considerations all the variables. Unless they are looking for machines and robots, and I guess that means a lot regarding the type of culture there is in there.
Would not recommend.
The process is quite long, it took about 3 months to complete. First, you have to complete 3 online test, cultural fit test, numerical test and verbal test. Then invited to individual business case which requires you to pick 2 seasonal beers. Next round is behavioral interview, then is the business simulation game. I am waiting for the result of this round