I applied through a recruiter. The process took 6 weeks. I interviewed at Epic in May 2015
Interview
Great HR, friendly people, and an astounding company mission and purpose with flawed recruitment techniques. I was contacted by a recruiter to apply for the position via email. Once applying, I received another email to schedule a phone interview and take a management skills assessment test. Upon completion of these tasks, I was prompted to set up a time to take the Epic Skills Assessment test, where things went awry. The "Non-Technical Assessment" is in fact very technical, and I only had the opportunity to take two assessments, both having to do with programming and its related logic. This detail is very different than the "four assessment" non-tech test which you will read about in other reviews. To this affect, the online proctoring service reaffirmed this 4-part assumption when providing exam rules before I began, and this information sounded like it would provide a much more holistic view of a candidate (writing/logic/math with a hint of coding). Brush up on your coding if you're going to pursue this recruiting process, because it appears they don't appreciate mixing and matching; moreover, prepare to be deduced to a painted picture of binaries and not that of an individual. Overall, it proved to be a waste of my efforts in countless hours spent scheduling/rescheduling due to technical difficulties, researching the company, and completing the tasks required. I wish them the best in adapting their recruitment methods to achieve a more balanced profile for such a customer-facing role!
I applied through college or university. The process took 3 weeks. I interviewed at Epic in May 2014
Interview
I applied through career center job posting at my university. First, there was a short phone interview which was super easy, nothing unexpected. Then, I was scheduled to take an online assessment test which consisted of several parts. Some logic, math etc questions. The most difficult part was a programming assessment where you had to write a program in the language you know (or a pseudo code) to solve a given problem. It consisted of 3 problems and I did only one. I am guessing this hurt me since I wasn't advanced to the next stage of the interview process.
I was emailed by who worked at Epic suggesting that I apply to work there after graduation. I applied, had a casual phone interview, took a three hour long test, and went to Epic for an on site interview. The on site interview was pretty casual and everyone was nice. I received a phone call two weeks later telling me that I did not get the job.