Relatively low entry bar as far as software developer experience. It was a fun place to work. Uses web-based software development technologies.
Their COVID response was bad. They at first tried to deny it was an issue and instructed TLs to lie to us about it. They allowed us to work from home for a bit, then tried to force us back into the office. They required us to give them medical information to continue to let us work from home, before the county health department told them not to. They were trying to redefine working remotely as working in the office with remote technologies.
Following all this, they started restricting certain employee areas that used to have some amount of self-expression. They began purging the details for ex-employees. All of this was likely part of an anti-unionization push, which also resulted in the combining of teams.
I had to take a lot of tests and had a phone interview where I talked about my past projects. The tests were hours long and took a long time.
30-minute phone screen, then an OA around 4 hours long. The OA had mental math, but also a few LeetCode-type problems. They were not very difficult if you studied common patterns and implementation.
One single virtual interview after a multihour OA. The interview was 4 hours long, but only ~2 hours was actual interview stuff. The rest was two presentations from different people about life at Epic. The 2 hours of interview included a case study,
I had to take a lot of tests and had a phone interview where I talked about my past projects. The tests were hours long and took a long time.
30-minute phone screen, then an OA around 4 hours long. The OA had mental math, but also a few LeetCode-type problems. They were not very difficult if you studied common patterns and implementation.
One single virtual interview after a multihour OA. The interview was 4 hours long, but only ~2 hours was actual interview stuff. The rest was two presentations from different people about life at Epic. The 2 hours of interview included a case study,