

Updated by Roblox candidates

Associate Product Manager Interview Experience
They had this platform called Speak where I was literally practicing with other people competing for the same spot, so it was camaraderie but also competitiveness. Then at the finalist stage, some people got way more contact with the team than others, and it felt really weird.
Interview process
I interviewed for an entry-level APM role, and the biggest thing that stood out was how specific the questions were to Roblox itself. I had a product design round, a behavioral round, and a system design round, and the product and system questions both kept tying back to the Roblox ecosystem instead of feeling like generic PM cases. The process also took a lot of preparation because they had a platform where applicants practiced with each other, which created this weird mix of camaraderie and competitiveness. I made it to the last round and felt like I was a finalist, but the waiting afterward was rough and very opaque. Some finalists seemed to get more calls and more one-on-one contact than others, and I never felt like they were transparent about where people stood. My behavioral interviewer was also really rude, and overall I ended up rejected.
- Technical interview
- Other
Interview tips
I would over-prepare for Roblox-specific answers instead of relying on normal PM prep. Every answer needs to stay aligned to Roblox, especially around the economy and monetization, and you should be ready to rephrase things in the format they want even if they are not fully clear about it. I would also practice both high-level product thinking and some technical/system thinking because different interviewers seem to want different levels of detail.
Company culture
What I saw was a process with a lot of prep intensity and not a lot of transparency at the end. They had this practice platform where candidates could collaborate with each other, so it felt supportive and competitive at the same time. Interviewer style also seemed inconsistent, especially on how technical they wanted answers to be. Once I got to the finalist stage, it felt weird because some people were clearly getting more contact and more one-on-one time with the team than others, and nobody really knew where they stood.
Questions asked
Overview
My first round was a product design case, and it was very Roblox-specific. They did not want a generic PM answer. I had to keep bringing everything back to the Roblox product and economy, and the follow-ups were mostly about how my idea would actually work inside their system.
Question types asked
Specific questions asked
How would this integrate with the Roblox economy system?
How would you implement this into the system and think about monetization?
I talked through product ideas for the Build-A-Bear collaboration and tried to tie them back to how it would help the company and improve the bottom line. The pressure in this round was not just coming up with an idea. They kept pushing on monetization and how the product would fit into the Roblox economy system, so I had to keep my answer aligned to Roblox specifically.
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