My interview experience with Ecolab was marked by poor coordination, inconsistent communication, and concerning insights into the team culture.
After completing an initial recruiter screening, I was scheduled for an on-site interview at a facility and received multiple confirmations with a specific date and time. When I arrived, the hiring manager I was scheduled to meet was not there.
There was no proactive outreach, no advance notice, and no on-site HR representative who took ownership of the situation. An employee informally stepped in to help determine what had happened. I was told the manager was not present that day. Later, when I followed up with the recruiter, I was given a different explanation. The conflicting accounts strongly suggested internal misalignment. While scheduling mistakes can occur, the lack of accountability and clear communication was unacceptable—especially for a candidate who had taken time and traveled for the interview.
Despite this, I agreed to return for a second on-site interview.
The second visit proceeded logistically, but it revealed deeper issues. The interviewer appeared unprepared and did not have my resume readily available. For a company of this size, that level of preparation was disappointing.
More concerning were the themes that emerged during discussion:
A former employee was described in detail, including commentary about their perceived shortcomings and eventual resignation. Speaking negatively about a previous team member during an interview reflects poorly on leadership and raises questions about how challenges are managed internally.
Cross-department interaction was framed in terms of “gossip.” Professional collaboration should be described in terms of communication, coordination, and operational awareness—not informal rumor-sharing. That language was telling.
The training process included mention of evaluating whether new hires ask “basic” or “unnecessary” questions, followed by the disclaimer that “there are no stupid questions.” Those two messages contradict each other. In structured environments, new employees should be encouraged to ask clarifying questions without fear of being judged.
There were comments indicating that standard operating procedures were interpreted differently across individuals, leading to internal conflict. In an operational or production setting, inconsistency in SOP understanding is not a minor issue—it reflects weak standardization and oversight.
After the second interview, I was informed the decision would move to HR and later received a rejection email.
The most concerning aspect of this experience was not the rejection. It was the combination of disorganization, lack of accountability, and cultural signals observed during the process. Candidates invest time, preparation, and in some cases travel expenses to participate in on-site interviews. The level of professionalism demonstrated during this process did not reflect well on the organization.
Based on this experience, I would advise candidates to ask very direct questions about communication structure, training consistency, and management alignment before committing to an on-site interview.