I applied through college or university. The process took 2 days. I interviewed at Genpact in Oct 2021
Interview
Firstly, there is a JAM session (just be confident and fluent while you are speaking) we were given a topic “the most memorable day”. And nearly more than half couldn’t get through this round, I cleared this round.
Secondly, there is an aptitude round (quant, English, verbal and logical). These questions were easy and minimum practice would be enough to crack this round.
Lastly, there was a telephonic round where you will be asked hr questions through phone:
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Some of the questions assessors asked me:
1. Tell me something about yourself.
2. Hobbies.
3. Favourite holiday spot. Explain your trip.
4. Why Genpact?
5. If given a chance to direct a movie. Which movie would it be?
Etc.
Mostly questions depending on what you answer them.
The assessor speaking to me was very friendly.
And careful listening to what the assessor is asking is very important because they speak too well that we might not understand some questions clearly.
Finally, results were announced in the evening and I was one of the 18 members selected for Genpact out of 200.
I applied through an employee referral. I interviewed at Genpact (Noida) in Apr 2026
Interview
experience was good but took long time to proceed. They also asked for the past experience and job responsibilities, the have asked for explanation in deep for current projects .
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
explain about java along with their gc and metadata
home test of SQL, JavaScript and logic questions. you have 1.5 hours to finish it and then you have zoom with a team manager on the task where you need to explain your thinking.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
which number comes next in the following sequence: 2, 6, 12, 20, 30, ?
A typical Java interview experience includes technical questions on core Java concepts, object-oriented programming (OOP), data structures like collections and multithreading, and potentially scenario-based or real-world coding challenges. Interviewers also frequently ask about memory management, differences between classes (like ArrayList and Vector), and specific APIs or design patterns