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A Primer on Jobs in Industry Nitin Jindal Department of Computer Science University of Illinois at Chicago
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Overview My Experience Different Types of Jobs in Industry Interview Process and Application requirements Post Interview
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About me – 5 th Year PhD in Computer Science – Data Mining, Web Mining, Machine Learning and Natural Language Processing – Wanted job in Industry
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My Job search experience Started looking for a job in January The process took 3 months – From applying for a job to getting one Applied for both research and software engineering positions Interviewed for two research and three software engineering positions
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Research Related Job Research Scientist – Similar to academic research – Easy to switch back to Academia – Ex: Research Scientist at Google Research, Yahoo Research and Microsoft Research Post Doc Researcher – Ex: IBM, Microsoft Research, etc Research Engineer –Team dependent –Publishing papers –team dependent –Your role in the team –Ex: –Research Software Design Engineer (RSDE) at Microsoft –Scientist at Yahoo Labs, –Research Engineer in a Google Researchh Team Job Application depends on (in that order): 1) direct contacts (person you know before, internships, conferences) 2) advisor’s connections, 3) referral, 4) university, 5) direct application
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Software Engineering Different Roles – Software Engineer Two roles: Development and Testing MS and BS software engineers mostly do coding PhD software engineers are do design – Software Engineer in Test – Program Manager Least coding, more management, interacting with clients, drawing user specifications and other non-technical parts of software development cycle Apply directly, via advisor or via UIC recruiting website
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How and Where to look for Jobs Advisor, Friends and other Contacts Message Boards – Kdnuggets, dbworld, indeed.com, etc Websites of – Research Labs (ex: PARC, NEC, ANL) – Companies (ex: Google, Microsoft, HP, IBM, Apple, etc) Recruiters – Useful for non CS jobs (like hedge funds), startups, etc – Companies/People who recruit for other companies – How to find them? People who work in silicon valley generally know one or two such recruiters
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Interview Process Initial Phone Screen – One, two and up to three phone interviews Full Time Interview Research position – Resume is different from academic one – Presentation on your research – 6-7 technical interviews Algorithm and design questions, questions on research Software Engineering position – 5-6 technical rounds One round is a discussion on your research and CV – Some interviews are a lot more tougher than the others Depends on the team and the position you are applying
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Interview Questions Research – open ended questions – A lot of Qs on your research area – Some algorithm design and programming language specific Qs Software Engineer – A lot of Algorithm design questions – Some programming language specific Qs – Expect tough Qs based on fundamental concepts like probability, combinatorics, sorting, etc Some Qs depend on your background – If background in theoretical research, expect more coding questions like “reverse a string in C” – If background in applied research, expect theoretical questions like on probability theory
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Preparing for an Interview Different Strategies work for different people Based on my personal experience – practice the interview questions available online You will be surprised with how many Qs you have seen before – brush up concepts in your research area – Most Algorithm design Qs are based on simple fundamental concepts Not much need to study complex algorithms like string matching, graphs, etc
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Things to Remember During an Interview When asked a question – Take few seconds to do back of the envelope calculations What if you get stuck in a question – Never have dead air for more than few seconds. That is not useful – Ask the interviewer for a hint – Try to solve a sub-problem first Take a break between interviews – Recharges your batteries, helps you shed of mistakes in the previous interview Questions for Interviewers – Only opportunity to know more about the company/job Examples: Difference b/w MS and PhD engineers, flexibility, type of projects you will do, flexibility in switching b/w research and product teams, first 6-12 months of a new hire, etc
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Picking a Right Team The team that you join in a company is very important Case Study: Microsoft – Bing Search or SQL Server Team PropertyBing SearchSQL Server Learning Opportunities Career Growth Financial Reward (bonuses, salary) Job Security Future Upside
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Picking a right team (contd.) Case Study: Google – Google gives highest bonuses in industry Which Google teams would get the best bonus? – The one which makes most money – ADSENSE, ADWORDS
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Salary Glassdoor.com has very accurate estimates of average salary – Also good source for reviews and interview questions Three components of a salary – Base salary – Signing bonus – Relocation package/bonus – Equity Stocks Units, Restricted Stock Units, Stock Options
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Negotiating for a salary Depends on how well you did in your interview Base salary is the most important component – Bonus and pay increase depends on the base salary – Base salary rarely changes, but you will get more stocks, bonus, etc – Recruiters are most reluctant to negotiate base salary Cash in hand is the least important component – Signing bonus, relocation, etc – Comes with up to 40% taxes Ideal scenario: Ask for best possible base salary even if it comes at expense of equity and signing bonus
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Negotiating for a Salary (contd.) Can negotiate only ONCE – Best to negotiate when you also have an offer from at least one more company You need Leverage – Offer from a rival company – Perform well in the interviews Google usually does not negotiate, Microsoft and Yahoo do
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Misc. Websites I used to study for interviews – Glassdoor.com interviews – Topcoder tutorial http://www.topcoder.com/tc?d1=tutorials&d2=alg_ind ex&module=Static http://www.topcoder.com/tc?d1=tutorials&d2=alg_ind ex&module=Static – Wikipedia for sorting, probability, etc – Slides of the data mining course for my research – http://blog.seattleinterviewcoach.com/2009/02/1 40-google-interview-questions.html http://blog.seattleinterviewcoach.com/2009/02/1 40-google-interview-questions.html
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Thank You
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