I applied through university. The process took 2 months. I interviewed at Epic (Verona, WI) in Jul 2012
Interview
I went to Alumni Career Fair and talked with Epic recruiter and agree to be considered. After a week I was asked to check if everything was putted correctly, 2 days later I was requested to fill out Rembrandt profile. Few days later we scheduled phone interview, and participated in it. Then it was invitation to Pearson VUE center for tests (Math and software logic). Because I had part of my education done outside US I was asked to send them all transcripts. Done that so finally I was invited to the HQ. All what other said was true - so I will not write about it. Please note that during final interview if they will give you 2-minute test (10 questions math and verbal) and will talk about evaluation of the offer you are almost in. Almost because someone gave me bad review during process and I was not offer a job.
Glassdoor had very accurate description of the whole process. I did resume drop, did the online assessment, then got scheduled for a role introduction session where you listen to the person who currently has the job to describe what they do. Afterwards, there's the superday online where you will do a 10-min presentation on any topic you like and case study with peers, then behaviors. Overall a pretty smooth and enjoyable experience.
I applied online. The process took 4 weeks. I interviewed at Epic (Madison, WI)
Interview
I sent in my application and received an email from HR two days later asking if I agreed on thee salary. First process is you get a role intro, then an assessment test which is like 4 hours. They heavily rely on your test scores and are confirming that you’re a relatively normal and capable person before they offer you the job.
I applied through a recruiter. The process took 2 weeks. I interviewed at Epic in Aug 2022
Interview
I was contacted on LinkedIn by a person from epic who encouraged me to apply for project manager role, sent me a link, I’m guessing I was scouted because on my profile I was #openforwork And I had some EHR software implementation experience in healthcare in my work history. (About 6 months worth). I filled out the project manager application online, I scheduled a time to watch the role introduction (just a zoom live seminar with some info on the role) and take the assessments. I did send the recruiter Just a question before my assessments asking for how much the role paid, like a salary range even, he replied with a non-answer saying that it is different for every candidate and once they have more information on my background, we can talk about salary.
That was kind of annoying, seeing as they were asking me to sign up for a 3 to 4 hour test for a role that I wasn’t even sure if it would be worth it, especially since moving to Wisconsin was part of the requirements. My last job was remote and I was mostly looking for remote roles.
I studied a bit, looked up some logic questions or questions from the assessment (didn’t find much but a few practice questions online that folks said were from epic hiring tests) I took the assessment and I think I did pretty accurately but I used most of the available time, so speed was not something I felt I really competed on. After a few days I got an email saying that they were not going to move forward with me as a candidate. Seemed like a cool job but I was relieved honestly. It seems like a role for folks fresh out of college where you give your life to the company and they work you to the bone. I’m later in my life and career I don’t really have the energy for all that.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
A man walks into a hardware store and asks the shopkeeper for the price of an item.
“They’re $1 each”
“Ok. Give me 600.”
“That’ll be $3”
What did he buy?