Good pay, good health insurance, and I got a lot of creative freedom over my projects. Most of the people there are very kind and smart. Working here will help you grow your professional skills quickly.
Management is very metric-driven, so you will get grilled if they think you are spending too long on a project, even when that is largely out of your control.
The work-life balance is not great (but for software devs, not too bad) – they will constantly push you to work more hours. It's easy to get burned out, as many others have mentioned.
Upper management seemed quite out of touch.
I submitted my resume through Handshake, completed an online assessment, and then had a brief phone interview. The phone interview was mostly behavioral, with some questions about topics on my resume.
Phone behavioral and online assessment followed by a Zoom interview with live coding and system design questions. The first parts were done at the same time, and the next round was dependent on those results.
Received an initial phone interview with a developer at Epic. It was a standard kind of screening phone call to verify credentials and go through the job requirements and such. Then came a skills assessment, which consisted of four parts: programmin
I submitted my resume through Handshake, completed an online assessment, and then had a brief phone interview. The phone interview was mostly behavioral, with some questions about topics on my resume.
Phone behavioral and online assessment followed by a Zoom interview with live coding and system design questions. The first parts were done at the same time, and the next round was dependent on those results.
Received an initial phone interview with a developer at Epic. It was a standard kind of screening phone call to verify credentials and go through the job requirements and such. Then came a skills assessment, which consisted of four parts: programmin