My Interview Experience at Toptal: A Cautionary Tale
I recently went through an interview process with Toptal, and while I initially appreciated the rigor of their screening, the experience took a turn that left me extremely disappointed—and frankly, concerned.
During the interview, I was asked to solve what turned out to be a real business case involving vertical marketing strategy. Unlike typical interview challenges, this one required me to dive deep into budget optimization across several marketing channels: AdWords, Display, LinkedIn, and Organic. I created a working optimization algorithm to forecast performance and allocate spend across those channels efficiently, aiming to maximize returns within budget constraints.
To my surprise, after I presented my findings and walked them through my high-level methodology and forecast results, they asked me to submit the actual optimization algorithm. This raised a huge red flag.
Let’s be clear—this wasn’t a take-home test or a mock problem. This was a fully fleshed-out business challenge, and asking for my proprietary algorithm during an interview is, at best, unprofessional, and at worst, a blatant attempt to extract intellectual property without compensation.
I refused to provide the actual code but explained how the model worked at a strategic level. After that, communication dropped off. They took my analysis and disappeared.
In hindsight, this felt like a bait-and-switch. Interviews should be about evaluating skill and fit—not extracting free consulting work under the guise of recruitment. I would caution others, especially those in strategy, analytics, or data science, to be wary of processes like this.