Zulily's interview process is heavily influenced by Amazon's framework, so expect similar rigor in coding and behavioral rounds. The coding problems are typically medium to hard LeetCode level, and the mandatory 'Bar Raiser' round adds an extra layer of evaluation tied to Amazon's Leadership Principles. Many candidates find it slightly less intense than a core Amazon loop but more comprehensive than a standard startup due to this structured, principle-based approach.
Focus intensely on array/string manipulation, hash maps, linked lists, trees (especially BST and traversals), and graph algorithms (BFS/DFS). Given Zulily's e-commerce context, be prepared for problems related to inventory management, scheduling, or optimization—practice questions tagged 'Amazon' as they share a similar question bank. Aim for 100-150 medium problems and 30-50 hard ones to build speed and accuracy.
Extremely important; the Bar Raiser round is almost entirely behavioral and judges you against all 16 Leadership Principles. Prepare 8-10 detailed stories using the STAR method, ensuring each story highlights 2-3 principles (e.g., 'Customer Obsession' with a concrete example of going above-and-beyond). Practice articulating how your past work demonstrates 'Ownership,' 'Bias for Action,' and 'Learn and Be Curious'—Zulily values engineers who can drive projects end-to-end in a fast-paced environment.
After applying, expect a 1-2 week lag for recruiter screening. The entire loop (4-5 interviews) usually takes 2-3 weeks to schedule. The final Bar Raiser round can add 1-2 weeks as it requires senior leader availability. From first interview to offer, the total process is often 4-6 weeks. Delays commonly occur during the 'Debrief' and ' Hiring Committee' stages where candidates are calibrated against the leadership principles bar.
SDE-2 interviews include system design questions focusing on scalability and trade-offs for distributed systems, in addition to coding and behavioral rounds. SDE-3 expects deep system design expertise—be ready to architect multi-service platforms, discuss data partitioning, latency optimization, and lead technical discussions. For SDE-3, emphasize your experience influencing architecture, mentoring, and making high-stakes decisions that align with long-term business goals in an e-commerce setting.
A frequent pitfall is diving into code immediately without clarifying requirements or edge cases. Zulily interviewers value collaborative problem-solving; always ask clarifying questions, discuss brute-force approaches first, then optimize. Another mistake is under-preparing for the Bar Raiser—technical excellence alone won't compensate for weak behavioral stories tied to Leadership Principles. Treat every round as if it's a behavioral assessment.
Research Zulily's public engineering blog and tech talks to understand their stack: they use Java/Scala, AWS, and microservices. Be familiar with challenges in flash sale e-commerce—massive traffic spikes, inventory synchronization, and pricing algorithms. While you won't be tested on proprietary systems, discussing how you'd design a system for a flash sale event, considering idempotency and eventual consistency, will demonstrate relevant context. Review their mobile app and website to think about user experience trade-offs.
Candidates who excel connect their technical solutions to business impact and Zulily's Leadership Principles. In coding rounds, articulate trade-offs and test cases thoroughly. In the Bar Raiser, use specific metrics (e.g., 'improved site performance by 20%') in your stories. Show genuine curiosity about their business model—ask insightful questions about scaling their daily sales events or managing supplier integrations. Demonstrating 'Customer Obsession' through examples of improving end-user experience is a key differentiator.