Great environment, challenging and extremely interesting work. The food is fantastic. Flexible hours as long as you get 40/week, with lots of feedback about your project from superiors.
Employees are often slightly late to meetings. Work is taken seriously, but there's a feeling of playfulness that is sometimes seen as unprofessional.
Some better iOS development teaching would be beneficial to get a quicker start on coding. Otherwise, the work was great, and everybody was extremely friendly.
I met a recruiter at a career fair, and he set me up with a phone interview a few weeks later. The phone interviewer asked me about a past project I worked on, what I learned from it, and what was the most challenging problem I had to solve—questions
I was invited to Epic's campus for an interview about 2-3 weeks after their recruiter had visited my university and I took some of their tests: programming, math, and logic. They flew me out to Madison/Verona for a couple of days. One was spent expl
I initially spotted Epic at an internship fair at my university. They asked about my GPA as well as my SAT/ACT scores. One of their first questions was something along the lines of, "What percentage of the time are you willing to travel?" Which I tho
I met a recruiter at a career fair, and he set me up with a phone interview a few weeks later. The phone interviewer asked me about a past project I worked on, what I learned from it, and what was the most challenging problem I had to solve—questions
I was invited to Epic's campus for an interview about 2-3 weeks after their recruiter had visited my university and I took some of their tests: programming, math, and logic. They flew me out to Madison/Verona for a couple of days. One was spent expl
I initially spotted Epic at an internship fair at my university. They asked about my GPA as well as my SAT/ACT scores. One of their first questions was something along the lines of, "What percentage of the time are you willing to travel?" Which I tho