Amazon Software Development Manager interview questions
based on 243 ratings - Updated Apr 1, 2026
Averageinterview difficulty
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How others got an interview
39%
Applied online
Applied online
37%
Recruiter
Recruiter
13%
Employee Referral
Employee Referral
7%
Other
Other
2%
Staffing Agency
Staffing Agency
2%
In Person
In Person
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Amazon interviews FAQs
Candidates applying for Software Development Manager roles take an average of 14 days to get hired, when considering 1 user submitted interviews for this role. To compare, the hiring process at Amazon overall takes an average of 38 days.
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recruiter found me on linked in. Once I responded back they scheduled interview next day. Hiring manager was nice person, he mostly asked behavioral questions. Next day received email for next interview which was technical. There were 3 in total in person interviews.
I applied through an employee referral. The process took 2 weeks. I interviewed at Amazon in Jul 2014
Interview
Amazon is similar to other larger tech companies. Best advice, be prepared and understand the leadership principles.
Phone Interview(s) - I only had one. Focused on my experience and specific examples that showed how I managed a group of software engineers. Questions like, "tell me a time you overcame a significant challenge or problem".
In-Person Interviews - This was a half-day event where I was interviewed by 4 people separately. Each had a specific focus and area they were questioning. Two were clearly focused solely on my experiences with many similar questions to my phone screen, but more detailed. Two had some similar question, but also gauged my technical background and they did ask me coding questions. While I was told I would not be expected to code on the job, the role does expect you to be a competent in software design and development.
Overall the experience was very good. The recruiter from the very beginning gave me all I needed to survive the process so long as I also planned well and knew my own personal examples well. I studied the amazon leadership principles and had examples that met each criteria. I brushed up on my coding skillz... basics, trees, data structures, big o, etc.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Job experience questions mostly. Know what you have done, be specific.
For coding - know the basics and practice the most common questions out there.
No brain teasers.
Interview process was pretty straightforward - no surprises. Annoying part was that they went ahead with this, but apparently didn't have a position equivalent in scope to the one I currently have. Unclear why they thought I'd be motivated to make a change.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Nothing unexpected. Several interviewers asked me whether I'd ever had to fire someone. Is that telling?