I applied online. The process took 4 weeks. I interviewed at Anheuser-Busch InBev (Londres, Inglaterra) in Apr 2015
Interview
After the online application, you will receive 3 consecutive online tests to answer. There's a Logical Reasoning, a Cultural Fit and a Strength Assessment test. Your profile will be analysed and, if approved, you will be called for a phone interview.
It is made by a British recruiting agency and it takes around 10-20 minutes. Your personal and CV informations are verified and there are a few questions to check your knowledge on the company and the beer industry. If you are selected, you be called for the third step of the recruitment process, also realized by the agency in the UK.
It consists of a 30 minute phone interview on your personal experiences with plenty of questions about your personality and "how would you react". It is followed by a case study in which you'll have 30 minutes to solve and 8 minutes to present, followed by a few questions about your final decisions.
Everything is made in English (except a few online tests which can be done in other languages).
I was not called for the fourth step of the process, which is made by AB Inbev.
Interview questions [3]
Question 1
What are the main challenges of the Beer Industry nowadays?
I applied through college or university. The process took 2 weeks. I interviewed at Anheuser-Busch InBev in Jan 2014
Interview
On Campus interview with a case on the first round. A very long case with lots of numbers and information in it for you to read in one hour and then give a detailed recommendation on what to do. Then two more rounds of interviews over the phone and finally a final round at head quarters.
The phone interviews were mostly behavioral, and the last one, very detailed about my previous experience.
Summer intern 2014
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
The case was the most difficult one, and on the final interview they were picking on small details on the resume and why did you make the decisions you made. Be carefull on what you say because your words might be interpreted differently than what you were trying to communicate.