"Questions:
What is the purpose of the scooters? (commuting in between office buildings or zipping across on the floor or for employees to be able to get to locations nearby e.g. lunch, coffee )
Is the entire workforce in the same building or multiple buildings?
If the employees in multiple buildings how far apart are they?
Where are the offices located? (lousy weather would mean more employees using scooters to save time and a more convenient transport)
Estimation:
Planning for highes"
JD - "Questions:
What is the purpose of the scooters? (commuting in between office buildings or zipping across on the floor or for employees to be able to get to locations nearby e.g. lunch, coffee )
Is the entire workforce in the same building or multiple buildings?
If the employees in multiple buildings how far apart are they?
Where are the offices located? (lousy weather would mean more employees using scooters to save time and a more convenient transport)
Estimation:
Planning for highes"See full answer
"This is a Fermi problem — an estimation or approximation problem with limited information and back-of-the-envelope calculations. There's no right answer: interviewers want to understand how you think and how well you can explain your reasoning, rather than what you already know.
Recall the formula for Fermi problems:
Ask clarifying questions
Catalog what you know
Make equation(s)
Think about edge cases to add to equation
**Breakdown components of your equat"
Exponent - "This is a Fermi problem — an estimation or approximation problem with limited information and back-of-the-envelope calculations. There's no right answer: interviewers want to understand how you think and how well you can explain your reasoning, rather than what you already know.
Recall the formula for Fermi problems:
Ask clarifying questions
Catalog what you know
Make equation(s)
Think about edge cases to add to equation
**Breakdown components of your equat"See full answer
"This is a Fermi problem — an estimation or approximation problem with limited information and back-of-the-envelope calculations. There's no right answer: interviewers want to understand how you think and how well you can explain your reasoning, rather than what you already know.
Recall the formula for Fermi problems:
Ask clarifying questions
Catalog what you know
Make equation(s)
Think about edge cases to add to equation
**Breakdown components of your equat"
Exponent - "This is a Fermi problem — an estimation or approximation problem with limited information and back-of-the-envelope calculations. There's no right answer: interviewers want to understand how you think and how well you can explain your reasoning, rather than what you already know.
Recall the formula for Fermi problems:
Ask clarifying questions
Catalog what you know
Make equation(s)
Think about edge cases to add to equation
**Breakdown components of your equat"See full answer
"Thanks for the question.
I would like to start off by asking some clarifying questions:
When we say a holiday season, are we referring to the 15 registered holidays in a year? or the holiday season on Mid November until January 15 for thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year?
When we say a medium-sized company, are we referring to a US company or an international company?
When we say how much productivity is lost, is it in terms of revenue, production, hours, engagement?
I would like to g"
Yonatan G. - "Thanks for the question.
I would like to start off by asking some clarifying questions:
When we say a holiday season, are we referring to the 15 registered holidays in a year? or the holiday season on Mid November until January 15 for thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year?
When we say a medium-sized company, are we referring to a US company or an international company?
When we say how much productivity is lost, is it in terms of revenue, production, hours, engagement?
I would like to g"See full answer
"This is another Fermi problem — an estimation or approximation problem with limited information and back-of-the-envelope calculations. There's no right answer: interviewers want to understand how you think and how well you can explain your reasoning, rather than what you already know.
Recall the formula for Fermi problems:
Ask clarifying questions
Catalog what you know
Make equation(s)
Think about edge cases to add to equation
**Breakdown components of your"
Exponent - "This is another Fermi problem — an estimation or approximation problem with limited information and back-of-the-envelope calculations. There's no right answer: interviewers want to understand how you think and how well you can explain your reasoning, rather than what you already know.
Recall the formula for Fermi problems:
Ask clarifying questions
Catalog what you know
Make equation(s)
Think about edge cases to add to equation
**Breakdown components of your"See full answer
"This is a Fermi problem — an estimation or approximation problem with limited information and back-of-the-envelope calculations. There's no right answer: interviewers want to understand how you think and how well you can explain your reasoning, rather than what you already know.
Recall the formula for Fermi problems:
Ask clarifying questions
Catalog what you know
Make equation(s)
Think about edge cases to add to equation
**Breakdown components of your equat"
Exponent - "This is a Fermi problem — an estimation or approximation problem with limited information and back-of-the-envelope calculations. There's no right answer: interviewers want to understand how you think and how well you can explain your reasoning, rather than what you already know.
Recall the formula for Fermi problems:
Ask clarifying questions
Catalog what you know
Make equation(s)
Think about edge cases to add to equation
**Breakdown components of your equat"See full answer
"This is a fun Fermi problem asked recently by Facebook — an estimation or approximation problem with limited information and back-of-the-envelope calculations.
Recall the formula for Fermi problems:
Ask clarifying questions
Catalog what you know
Make equation(s)
Breakdown components of your equation
Review and state assumptions
Compute
Sanity Check
Summarize
Ask clarifying questions
It's wise here to slow down and get some clari"
Exponent - "This is a fun Fermi problem asked recently by Facebook — an estimation or approximation problem with limited information and back-of-the-envelope calculations.
Recall the formula for Fermi problems:
Ask clarifying questions
Catalog what you know
Make equation(s)
Breakdown components of your equation
Review and state assumptions
Compute
Sanity Check
Summarize
Ask clarifying questions
It's wise here to slow down and get some clari"See full answer