So...let’s talk about job interviews with Wise.
A lot of people I know have had their interviews canceled at the last minute. Not politely rescheduled in advance, just canceled. Or endlessly moved around. Mine didn’t start that way. It started hopeful. Normal and maybe even encouraging. And then came the plot twist. I was assigned a manager whose entire professional universe seemed to exist exclusively inside Wise. No “before Wise,” no “outside Wise,” according to his Linkedin, no reference points beyond the company’s internal reality in his questions and responses. Now, I have over fifteen years of experience: senior roles, well-known global companies,different industries, different cultures, different kinds of problems. The kind of experience that usually helps people see patterns instead of rules.
And that’s when something uncomfortable clicked.
This wasn’t really an interview, it actually felt more like a competition disguised as process. There’s a very specific look someone gives you when they can’t map your experience to their internal playbook but can't admit it. Instead of curiosity, it turns into something else, the unspoken conclusion is simple: “I don’t understand this, therefore it’s not relevant.”
That’s usually the moment when things become clear. Certain people end up acting as gatekeepers, not because they’re looking for the best person, but because they’re looking for someone familiar. And judging by conversations with people in my professional circle, my experience wasn’t unique. But in a strange way, it’s probably fair they didn’t hire me.
When a company is really looking for a reflection rather than perspective, experience stops being an asset and starts being a liability. And in that case, it’s better for both sides to walk away early, even if the process pretends it’s about something else.