I applied through college or university. The process took 3 weeks. I interviewed at Epic in Feb 2017
Interview
I submitted my application at a campus career fair. A few weeks later they contacted me to set up a phone interview. After I scheduled it they contacted me to take their skills assessment test, which I took before I did the interview. The test had four parts; a speed math section, a section where they teach you a fake coding language and ask you questions on it, a speed logic section, and then a general logic/analysis test. It wasn't too crazy, and I have no math background. The phone call was short and simple, they spent more time explaining the job than asking about me. I think they put more weight on the test to be honest, but I don't know. Three days after the interview I got an email saying I wouldn't get the project manager position, but that they wanted me to come to Wisconsin for an onsite interview about a different position. That's where I am right now.
3 rounds - with final round being multi part. You take an exam and a personality test and do a final interview, and presentation. The presentation could be over any topic.
I applied online. I interviewed at Epic (Verona, WI)
Interview
Apply online. Sign up via emailed link for a 15m phone intro, and sign up for a round of 5 assessments that you have to take in one sitting (budget 2-3hrs). Then do the Rembrandt Profile Assessment (you don't get your results as they're PI) and that's about 40min.
On the call you learn about Epic and the role, they make sure you're still interested, get your questions answered by a current PM on the team who's interviewing you, then get told your recruiter will reach out and you'll either move on, or move "on" kind of vibe.
The process is very intense. Three or more hours of explanation, exams, and a presentation I had to create. The exams were both logic games and a personality test. I was preparing for weeks.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
Explain a process that you find interesting. This can be any process - manufacturing, distribution of products, or a method to create something.