
"Tell me about a time you had to decide whether an engineer was ready for promotion to Senior Engineer or Staff Engineer. Walk me through how you assessed readiness, how you handled ambiguity or disagreement in the process, and what outcome you drove."
At Databricks, promotion decisions have outsized impact on team credibility, retention, and org standards. This question tests whether you can evaluate scope, technical leadership, and organizational impact consistently rather than promoting based on tenure, visibility, or advocacy skill alone. It also probes how you handle edge cases: mixed signals across projects, disagreement from peer managers or senior ICs, and situations where the engineer is strong but not yet operating at the next level.
Interviewers want to hear how you calibrate against a real bar, gather evidence across surfaces like code reviews, architecture work, incident leadership, mentorship, and cross-functional influence, and then communicate the decision clearly and fairly.
A strong answer uses a specific promotion case, explains the criteria used, shows how the candidate collected multi-source evidence, and demonstrates fairness and ownership whether the answer was yes or no. The best responses include a difficult judgment call, a quantified outcome, and a lesson learned about raising the quality of future promotion decisions.