Aller au contenuAller au pied de page
  • Emplois
  • Entreprises
  • Salaires
  • Pour les employeurs

      Boostez votre carrière

      Découvrez votre salaire potentiel, décrochez des emplois de rêve et partagez vos témoignages de manière anonyme.

      employer cover photo
      employer logo
      employer logo

      ArcherDX

      Acquis par Invitae

      Est-ce votre entreprise ?

      À propos
      Avis
      Salaires et avantages
      Emplois
      Entretiens
      Entretiens
      Recherches associées: Avis sur ArcherDX | Offres d’emploi chez ArcherDX | Salaires chez ArcherDX | Avantages sociaux chez ArcherDX
      Entretiens chez ArcherDXEntretiens d’embauche pour Bioinformatics Software Developer chez ArcherDXEntretien chez ArcherDX


      Glassdoor

      • À propos
      • Récompenses
      • Blog
      • Nous contacter
      • Guides

      Employeurs

      • Compte employeur gratuit
      • Centre employeur
      • Blog pour les employeurs

      Informations

      • Aide
      • Règles de la communauté
      • Conditions d'utilisation
      • Confidentialité et choix publicitaires
      • Ne pas vendre ni partager mes informations
      • Outil de consentement aux cookies

      Travailler avec nous

      • Annonceurs
      • Carrières
      Télécharger l'application

      • Parcourir par :
      • Entreprises
      • Emplois
      • Lieux

      Copyright © 2008-2026. Glassdoor LLC. « Glassdoor », son logo, « Worklife Pro » et « Bowls » sont des marques déposées de Glassdoor LLC.

      Entreprises suivies

      Tenez-vous au courant des dernières opportunités et profitez de conseils d’initiés en suivant les entreprises de vos rêves.

      Recherche d’emplois

      Obtenez des recommandations et des mises à jour personnalisées en démarrant vos recherches.

      Entretien pour Bioinformatics Software Developer

      8 mars 2016
      Candidat à l'entretien anonyme
      Boulder, CO
      Aucune offre
      Expérience négative
      Entretien moyen

      Candidature

      J'ai postulé en ligne. Le processus a pris 2 mois. J'ai passé un entretien chez ArcherDX (Boulder, CO)

      Entretien

      After email contact with their recruiter, they sent me three coding tasks. The first two were trivial; the third was time-consuming and did not present an elegant solution but was also straight forward. Since I already work for a living, it took me two weekends to pound out the programs. Though they said, "ideally in Python", I implemented them in my language of choice. After a week without so much as an acknowledgement from the recruiter, I tried to follow up by email twice over the following weeks but received nothing in return. I've been in the bioinformatics field for nearly 15 years plus 5 years as a software developer for a government contractor, so I know there was nothing wrong with my code. I consider their failure to even acknowledge receipt of my programs highly unprofessional. The whole exercise was a waste of my time. I don't know if this is the situation with ArcherDX but I will float a theory based on previous experience. Some companies, particularly small biotech start-ups, often have PhDs with only a few years of experience running their bioinformatics departments. They are in that position because the biologists that run the company don't really understand bioinformatics. Those Bioinfo directors have a good thing going and they are not willing to recruit seasoned professionals that may be 10 - 15 years their senior because, in their insecurity, they are afraid of hiring their replacement or even running the "risk" of being upstaged by a subordinate. The most important lesson *I* learned when I was in that position (of being a junior director) was that hiring really good people ultimately reflects well on the person doing the hiring. In fact, so long as the salary discrepancy is small, the older recruits are probably happy to be doing the fun, hands-on work, while their nominal boss is doing administrative chores. Sure, if you really bugger things up, you might get replaced but more likely than not, you can learn from your staff while accruing management experience which you can parlay into an even better position at another company. The truly incompetent will be discovered in a year or two; trying to protect your position by only hiring your inferiors will only forestall the inevitable-- and probably torpedo your career prospects in the process.

      Questions d'entretien [1]

      Question 1

      Why don't you code in Python like we do?
      1 réponse
      5