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Amazon Product Manager (PM) Interview Guide

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VerifiedUnited States2 months ago
Amazon

Senior Product Manager (L5/L6) Interview Experience

Amazon·Senior / L5
What surprised me is how open ended the questions are, but each interviewer is very likely probing a specific Amazon leadership principle, so generic answers actually hurt you because you need to tease out what they’re really testing.
Interview date
4 months ago
Timespan
1 month
Difficulty
Easy

Interview process

I interviewed for a Senior Product Manager role where both L5 and L6 openings were in play. The process was pretty simple structurally: one 30-minute screening call, then a final loop of five separate one-hour interviews that I could schedule on different days. From what I saw, the whole thing was heavily behavioral and really centered on Amazon's leadership principles, even when the interviewers didn't say the principle out loud. The questions were pretty open-ended, so a big part of the challenge was recognizing what they were actually testing and tailoring my story to that. What stood out to me was how standardized the process felt around principles rather than product cases or execution exercises.

  • Phone interview
  • Final round

Interview tips

I'd spend more time actually writing out my stories and practicing how I want to tell them, especially the context, the actions I took, and the results. The questions are open-ended, but that doesn't mean you should answer generically. I'd go in trying to figure out which leadership principle is behind each question and answer for that specific reason. I'd also get an interview partner and practice live, because just practicing by myself was not as helpful as getting real feedback would have been.

Company culture

My read is that Amazon is running a very leadership-principles-driven process, and you really feel that from the first screen through the full loop. I felt like each interviewer probably had a set of questions tied to a specific principle, even if they never told me what it was. The process also seems flexible in logistics since the five loop interviews can be split across different days. More broadly, it felt like one of those moving-target processes where getting recent firsthand info actually matters because how companies run interviews can shift over time.

Questions asked

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