🚀 How to Approach a System Design Interview: Amazon Prime Video Example When tackling a system design problem, especially for a complex platform like Amazon Prime Video, it's crucial to approach it strategically. Here's how I break it down: Get clarity on the requirements, both functional and non-functional. Focus on the user flows, define the scale, detail out the components, improve scalability, and wrap up confidently. Pro Tip for Interviews: Don’t rush into drawing diagrams! Ask clarifying questions, understand the problem fully, and then build the system piece by piece. Communicate your thought process clearly, and focus on scalability, reliability, and cost-efficiency. Remember, the trick is to think aloud—explain why you're making certain decisions. The interviewer wants to understand your reasoning as much as the final solution! Good luck to all those preparing for system design interviews! You've got this!💪 Want to master system design interviews and land those $500k+ TPM roles? Make sure you're fully prepared with the Kracd.com interview prep course. Sign up today and transform your career in just 30 days. #SystemDesign #AmazonPrimeVideo #TechInterview #InterviewTips #Scalability #CDN #TechCareers #SoftwareEngineering #Microservices #TechLeadership
Anupam Singhal (MBA, CSM, SAFe)’s Post
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Interviewing at Amazon?! Check out some tips in this great video. 1. Use the STAR Structure for your answers to explain real examples. Avoid hypothetical answers. 2. Use Data! Quantify the scope, scale, and impact of your work. 3. Use "I" vs. "We". We can hire you, but we can't hire your whole team. Tell us what you were responsible for. https://lnkd.in/eKM6P45M
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Take a look at this helpful list on Medium, sourced from LeetCode's forum, which gathers all Amazon interview questions. It covers puzzles, design questions, and offers valuable tips for tackling Amazon's challenging interviews. Medium Link:- https://lnkd.in/gfMWZbd5
Amazon Final Interview Questions
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Before starting: 📌 Struggling with self-doubt and low confidence. 📌 Worried about how interviewers might react. 📌 Fearful of not meeting expectations. 📌 Scrolling through social media only made it worse, as everyone seemed to share only their successes. This is my personal experience, I’ve been through all of these phases. After starting: After the 1st interview: 🚫 Rejected. After the 5th interview: 🚫 Rejected, but I started answering some questions. After the 8th interview: 🚫 Rejected, but identified areas to improve. After the 10th interview: ✅ Got the offer! By now, you'll feel confident enough to say, "I can clear any interview." The real challenge for most people is simply getting started. Once you begin, you'll figure out what to do next. So, start before it’s too late. The more interviews you attend, the higher your chances of getting selected. Each one brings you closer to success and helps you improve for the next opportunity. I repeat JUST START Follow more for updates Shubham Soni ✌️ ❤️ 𝐃𝐦 𝐟𝐨𝐫 𝐥𝐨𝐧𝐠 𝐭𝐞𝐫𝐦 𝐦𝐞𝐧𝐭𝐨𝐫𝐬𝐡𝐢𝐩 Connect 1:1 - https://lnkd.in/gRwmU8Bd #react #frontend #amazon #connections #learning #frontend #linkedin #softwareengineer W3Schools.com Amazon
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Small Wins, Big Steps Forward 🚀 Just solved a problem featured in interviews at companies like Samsung and Amazon as part of my DSA course—in under 5 minutes. It's encouraging to see the progress that consistent practice brings. Excited to keep learning and growing on this journey! 🌱 #CodingJourney #ProblemSolving #DSA #ContinuousLearning #TechInterviews
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❎ Rejected Multiple Times Before Making It to Google!🚀 I still remember the gut-wrenching feeling of not making it through the rigorous interview processes, even after preparing diligently. The first time I interviewed with Amazon, I thought I was well-prepared. I quickly realized that my preparation was far from enough, as I struggled to confidently solve the problems presented. I completely blew my chances that year, and the setback was so disheartening that it took several years to regain the confidence to start planning for interviews again.😯 This experience is not unique; it happens to almost all of us. Sometimes, it's just bad timing or circumstances beyond our control. But we can't let these setbacks be excuses for everything we don't achieve.😌 The key is to pick ourselves up, learn from the experience, and keep pushing forward. Remember, every 'no' brings you closer to a 'yes.' Keep refining your skills, stay resilient, and never lose sight of your goals. Your perseverance will pay off, and success will follow.😊 Like and Share your thoughts in comments below!👇 Connect with Anshika Sinha for more such insightful posts! 💁♀️ #personaldevelopment #motivation #inspiration
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Interview Tip: Showcasing Technical Proficiency 📊 Show off your technical skills, don't be shy. It's not enough to just list your skills; you need to demonstrate how you've used them to solve real problems. 👉 How did your coding skills streamline a process? 👉 What complex problem did you solve, and how? Remember, Amazon interviewers love data. If you can, quantify your impact. Did your code boost efficiency by 40%? Say that. Also, work on your technical jargon. Being fluent in industry terminology shows that you're technically skilled. It’s the little details that set you apart. Wondering if your dream job exists? Explore opportunities at Alexa and Amazon Devices: https://lnkd.in/gy4PGThT .
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🌟 New Milestone: Tackling Amazon Interview Questions! 🌟 Excited to share that I've started diving into Amazon's interview questions as part of my preparation journey. 🎯 Today, I successfully solved 10 questions and I'm more motivated than ever to keep this momentum going! 🚀 This process is not just about cracking the questions but also about enhancing my problem-solving skills and deepening my understanding of algorithms and data structures. 💡 Looking forward to solving more and pushing my limits every day! If anyone has tips, resources, or wants to join me in this challenge, feel free to reach out. Let's keep each other motivated! Check out my progress on Leet Code: https://lnkd.in/dzGAX7GG #AmazonPrep #InterviewPreparation #CodingChallenge #ContinuousLearning #ProblemSolving #GrowthMindset #Striver
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IIIT | Apple | Software Development | Expert in Java, Spring Boot | Microservices | Software as a Service (SaaS) | Open To Work | Serving Notice Period
Great insights Shubham Soni, and I strongly second to this "The more interviews you attend, the higher your chances of getting selected" One thing we can do to avoid multiple rejections is that we have to give number of mock interviews. So, we can identify our mistakes and correct them before the actual interviews. And it will boost the confidence too!
Before starting: 📌 Struggling with self-doubt and low confidence. 📌 Worried about how interviewers might react. 📌 Fearful of not meeting expectations. 📌 Scrolling through social media only made it worse, as everyone seemed to share only their successes. This is my personal experience, I’ve been through all of these phases. After starting: After the 1st interview: 🚫 Rejected. After the 5th interview: 🚫 Rejected, but I started answering some questions. After the 8th interview: 🚫 Rejected, but identified areas to improve. After the 10th interview: ✅ Got the offer! By now, you'll feel confident enough to say, "I can clear any interview." The real challenge for most people is simply getting started. Once you begin, you'll figure out what to do next. So, start before it’s too late. The more interviews you attend, the higher your chances of getting selected. Each one brings you closer to success and helps you improve for the next opportunity. I repeat JUST START Follow more for updates Shubham Soni ✌️ ❤️ 𝐃𝐦 𝐟𝐨𝐫 𝐥𝐨𝐧𝐠 𝐭𝐞𝐫𝐦 𝐦𝐞𝐧𝐭𝐨𝐫𝐬𝐡𝐢𝐩 Connect 1:1 - https://lnkd.in/gRwmU8Bd #react #frontend #amazon #connections #learning #frontend #linkedin #softwareengineer W3Schools.com Amazon
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Great tips on interviewing at Amazon.
I recently interviewed for a job at Amazon. Here are 3...
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4 things I wish I had known before switching to Amazon! ❌ Solving random DSA problems doesn’t help. ✅ DSA is vast, so focus on highly rated, interview-specific problems to streamline your prep. ❌ Applying without direction won’t cut it. ✅ Referrals are often prioritized, so send personalized messages and get a recommendation. ❌ Learning everything at once can slow you down. ✅ Focus on mastering key topics relevant to your interview to build expertise faster. ❌ Fear of rejection keeps you stuck. ✅ See rejection as a chance to learn and improve. Don’t lose your consistency during this phase. I didn’t know these points and had to spend months learning them🙂 But unlike me, you have the option to save this time and learn all the important lessons from top SDEs working at your target company. You can connect with them for a FREE session here: https://lnkd.in/gXWer5_X They’ll build a custom plan, help with upskilling, train you for interviews, and guide you until you land your dream role. 🚀 #transition #dsa #collab #preplacedcollab
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