The hiring process at Ramp takes an average of 7 days when considering 1 user submitted interviews across all job titles. Candidates applying for Ingeniero De Software had the quickest hiring process (on average 7 days), whereas Ingeniero De Software roles had the slowest hiring process (on average 7 days).
I applied through other source. I interviewed at Ramp (Burke, VA)
Interview
The interview process started with an initial recruiter screen covering my background, technical experience, and interest in the role. After that, I had a technical interview focused on discussing past projects, problem solving, and general software engineering concepts. The interviewers were friendly and the overall process felt conversational rather than overly stressful. Communication throughout the process was clear and scheduling was straightforward.
First step of the interview process was a video recording answering three to four questions. Questions such as “tell us about your background”, something along the lines of “give us an example of how you created an implementation process”, etc
I applied online. I interviewed at Ramp in Apr 2026
Interview
The first step in the interview process was to meet with a recruiter. The recruiter asked a lot of vague questions but was very nice and easy to talk to. After the recruiter was the hiring manager and this is where things went awry. The hiring manager showed up six minutes late complaining about her allergies and seemed very overwhelmed and rushed. She explained the position, stating that it would be investigations heavy, which is my specialty as I have 10+ years leading and conducting complex investigations at places like PayPal and American Express, which is a world-class AML program. I was shocked when the hiring manager said she wasn't going to ask me any questions about investigations. Instead she focused on my collaboration skills and kept asking really vague questions like, "which team have you collaborated with the most?" I tried to explain that I collaborated with all kinds of teams and it was difficult me to quantify. Throughout the interview she kept mentioning how her allergies were bothering her and she did not appear to be too engaged in the interview and wasn't really warm or welcoming. I didn't have a good feeling about potentially working with this person and considered sending the recruiter a withdrawal of candidacy. I read a statistic somewhere that said that 90% of hiring manager don't know how to interview and this was definitely an example of that.