
Samsung Electronics Business Analyst interview typically runs 1-2 rounds: phone screen, final interview. Timeline is about 2-3 weeks and the process is conversational and practical.
$84K
Avg. Base Comp
$119K
Avg. Total Comp
2-3
Typical Rounds
2-4 weeks
Process Length
We’ve seen Samsung’s Business Analyst interviews reward candidates who can make their experience feel immediately usable in a business setting. Across candidate reports, the strongest signal was not polished theory but clear, grounded storytelling about prior projects, operational work, and how they’ve worked with stakeholders. Multiple candidates mentioned questions about cross-functional coordination, conflict resolution, teamwork style, and even supply chain or retail/CPG context, which tells us Samsung is looking for people who can translate messy business experience into something the team can trust.
A recurring theme is how much weight the company puts on hands-on analysis in everyday tools. Candidates repeatedly described Excel as a real filter, with questions on pivot tables, Vlookup/Xlookup, and financial formulas, plus Power BI basics in at least one interview. The non-obvious part is that this doesn’t seem to be about advanced analytics for its own sake; it’s about whether you can stay organized, work quickly, and handle the kind of repetitive, data-heavy tasks that support decision-making. One candidate even noted the interviewer kept working while they solved the problem, which reinforces how transactional and practical the evaluation can feel.
We also see that Samsung responds well to candidates who can connect their background to the company’s business model without sounding generic. The offer-winning experiences emphasized a real reason for Samsung and the role, while the unsuccessful one still showed that interviewers wanted evidence of fit through prior analysis work and comfort with routine data review. In other words, the bar here is less about flashy insights and more about credible business judgment, tool fluency, and steady execution.
Synthetized from 3 candidates reports by our editorial team.
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Real interview reports from people who went through the Samsung Electronics process.
The interview felt pretty straightforward and low pressure, especially because it was more like a conversation than a formal test. I came in through a referral and had a single video interview, which was comfortable and not very stressful. The interviewer started with a simple introduction and then moved into my previous experience, so being able to clearly tell my story mattered a lot more than trying to memorize perfect answers.
Most of the discussion stayed at a general level. I was asked about the projects I had worked on, my operational experience, and how I handled things like stakeholder interactions, conflict resolution, and cross-functional coordination. There were also basic analytics questions around Excel and Power BI, along with some practical Excel topics like Vlookup, Xlookup, and pivot tables. The supply chain side of my background also came up, so it helped to connect my experience to business operations. Nothing felt overly specific or technical, and the overall vibe was more about whether I could communicate well, explain my background confidently, and show that I had solid hands-on experience. I got an offer within about two weeks after the interview.
Prep tip from this candidate
Be ready to walk through your background and projects clearly, since the interview leaned heavily on self-introduction and previous experience. Also review practical Excel tools like Vlookup, Xlookup, and pivot tables, plus how you’ve used Power BI and handled stakeholder or cross-functional work in past roles.
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Sourced from candidate reports and verified by our team.
Topics based on recent interview experiences.
Featured question at Samsung Electronics
Detect a cycle in a singly linked list.
| Question | |
|---|---|
| Categorize Sales | |
| Three Zebras | |
| String Palindromes | |
| Impossibly Iterative Fibonacci | |
| Client Solution Pushback | |
| Your Strengths and Weaknesses | |
| Inactive Users | |
| Regularization and Validation | |
| 2nd Highest Salary | |
| Find the Missing Number | |
| Paired Products | |
| Upsell Transactions | |
| Hurdles In Data Projects | |
| Bagging vs Boosting | |
| Random SQL Sample | |
| Google Maps Improvement | |
| Groups of Anagrams | |
| Exam Scores | |
| Retailer Data Warehouse | |
| Precision and Recall | |
| Cumulative Sales Since Last Restocking | |
| Twenty Variants | |
| Completed Shipments | |
| Reducing Error Margin | |
| Detecting ECG Tachycardia Runs | |
| Assumptions of Linear Regression | |
| Search Linked List | |
| Digitizing Student Test Scores | |
| Using R Squared |
Synthesized from candidate reports. Individual experiences may vary.
Candidates typically start by applying directly or coming in through a referral. In the experiences shared, Samsung moved fairly quickly from application to the first interview stage, especially for internship and analyst roles.
The first live conversation is usually a recruiter or initial phone screen. This stage is light and conversational, focused on your background, prior experience, and whether your profile fits the Business Analyst role.
In some processes, candidates then meet with managers over Teams or video. This round covers teamwork style, previous data analysis projects, and practical Excel skills such as pivot tables and financial formulas, with some emphasis on how you handle data-heavy work.
For some candidates, the final round is split into two back-to-back 45-minute sections. The first half is a fit interview covering your story, motivation for Samsung and the role, and relevant experience; the second half is a case based on Samsung business exhibits, with math calculations and structured problem solving.
Samsung typically communicates a decision within roughly two weeks after the final interview. Candidates in the shared experiences received either an offer or a rejection after this final stage.