Salary is high, food and drink are good. When you start, you spend most of your time studying for exams, which keeps you from getting into trouble with the high pressure of the actual work.
High pressure, absolutely no work/life balance. The location is terrible, with no socializing possible. Obsolete technology makes it very hard to find a job afterward. You will stagnate in your role for years if you stay over two years.
We should stop telling employees that Mumps is the best database and Cache is fast. When people find out that there is no data to support any of those claims, they tend to start looking for jobs with better technologies.
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