ASE (Associate Software Engineer)
College
Not Specified (On-campus implied)
Rounds
Multiple rounds before final interview (aptitude and coding tests mentioned in context)
Posted
12 Nov 2025
<h3>Role: ASE (Associate Software Engineer)</h3> <p><strong>College:</strong> Not Specified (On-campus implied)</p> <p><strong>Interview Date:</strong> Around November 2024 (based on post date)</p> <p><strong>Interview Type:</strong> On-Campus, Full-Time</p> <p><strong>Result:</strong> Rejected (Based on similar experiences in comments)</p> <p><strong>Difficulty:</strong> Not Specified</p> <p><strong>Rounds:</strong> Multiple rounds before final interview (aptitude and coding tests mentioned in context)</p> <p><strong>Topics Asked:</strong> Introduce yourself, Projects, Internships, Questions for the interviewer</p> <h4>Experience:</h4> <p>This Reddit post describes a very short Accenture interview experience for an ASE role. The candidate had cleared the basic aptitude and coding tests and received an invitation to book an interview slot. The interview was scheduled for September 19th at 3 PM, and the candidate was instructed to be in the lobby 15 minutes prior. The system check took 2-3 minutes, and the candidate was called in immediately.</p> <p>The interview was conducted on proprietary software, and the interviewer seemed to be in a hurry. The interviewer immediately asked, "Introduce yourself." During the introduction, the interviewer's video frames were dropping, and he left the meeting. After re-entering the lobby, the interviewer called the candidate back and admitted it was a power failure on his end. He then asked the candidate to "Explain any one of your projects" and then another project, with no follow-up questions. Finally, he asked, "Any questions for me?". The interview lasted around 10-15 minutes for the original poster.</p> <p>Several comments on the post describe similar short interview experiences. One user waited 3.5 hours in the lobby for a 5-minute interview and was later rejected. Another user had an interview lasting barely 3 minutes, where the interviewer was eating chips, and did not receive results for a month. The general sentiment in the comments suggests that such short interviews often lead to rejection, even if the candidate felt confident.</p> </div>