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  • A lot of people watching this channel might want to have a career in computing and you work in industry

  • So I thought kind of we could just maybe have a chat about what it's like

  • From your point of view what you're looking for from people

  • And what you know what people should be thinking about when the you know what a period is

  • Thank you. That's a great question. I mean I hire about ten people a year a lot of them go into

  • What I would call a jason sees to computing so for example. I've got a team. That's working on sensing in the life sciences and

  • The Big Data is hitting everything right?

  • So if you're a data scientist which most computer scientists have some inclination towards at these days

  • And it is a huge premium you will have those kinds of fields as well open to you

  • Just so people know right you know the organization you are at for us

  • I'll try to be concise, but I'm in Hp labs

  • and I'm in the position where I direct a large group of people around the world in everything from mechatronics and robotics to

  • 3D printing software

  • To what we call security printing the security printing also ties in a lot to the internet of things if you use that cliche

  • Being able to interrogate a physical object whether it's a label packaging 3D printed object manufactured object

  • And then be able to get useful information to yourself off of that and so

  • The software folks that I'm looking for involved in everything from analytics Big Data

  • to algorithms being able to add to the

  • Sort of signal and image processing that I believe it - with sensing so a broad set of skills in there

  • We do also need people can roll up the sleeves and make this stuff leggy

  • Right so because it's really nice to talk about these algorithms

  • but I've got to put them on a mobile phone in the end and

  • So I do need people who are good with you know everything from Xamarin to you know the follows on to

  • Droid and Ios programming pretty much everything right now has a

  • processor somehow involved in it and the ability for you to code at the level below just the

  • UI you know the Ui based software is going to help you in

  • Terms of hiring what we're looking for obviously our people who have a very can-do attitude who have experience across both

  • Web technology and non web technology right? It's better not to edge and halt yourself and just focus on algorithms, or just focus on web

  • Generally speaking because I'm in a research

  • Lab we will tend to hire people who are better at the algorithm side and at writing those types of things

  • but we do have webby type things as well because any

  • Technology now is going to go live it's going to go mobile

  • It's going to go on the cloud and so we're looking for people who have had experience

  • Along the lines of what I saw here last year when I went through with the I think it was a third-year

  • Competition and with the third-year competition you saw a lot of students kind of rolling up the sleeves

  • Bringing different technologies to bear and saying oh yeah, we need a webby aspect to that because that's going to make it

  • Demonstrable at the Fair

  • But it also has to do something useful and so I think you see this real combination people always talk about

  • You know older Coders like myself who grew up writing you know ones and zeros literally at the start

  • to folks now who know how to exercise an apI for the web

  • people people on the website say boy

  • I wish those old guys would just do something interesting and the old guys say I wish those young guys would just do something that

  • Meant something right, but it's actually there's a real good commonality between there

  • And I think what we're seeing is that because so much technology now is

  • Intimately tied to needing good software to be written for it

  • You really need both of those and so people who have that ability to

  • You know do something with raspBerry Pi or Arduino something where you're kind of really getting your hands dirty and looking at

  • sort of the older Style programming languages whether it's C C++

  • even Java

  • To people who are much more webby

  • You know building out websites using Jason or something else if they'll people have both of those things or even python

  • I really like python because I think it gets people's hands dirty, but at the same time

  • they're able to percolate up from that so that's what we're looking for and of course being in research if you're good at R if

  • You're good at Matlab if you go to some of the open source types of approaches we're looking for that as well

  • those are just a starting point though, so

  • What we're really looking for and particularly in a research lab is we're looking for character

  • right so I I

  • Get to be pulled in I've got much more technical people in the various areas on my team of course than I am

  • But we pull people in and I try to ask them off-the-cuff questions to see how to handle them

  • So one guy, and it was surprising. I said, what's the worst thing you ever did that you didn't report?

  • You know to Eh&s so environmental health and safety and I didn't expect an answer, but he actually gave me one and so yeah

  • we had this radiation leak and

  • Covered it up and got all the material put away and all that and I'm like wow this is kind of disturbing

  • But the way he handled it

  • He said it wasn't the big deal, and it would have shut down the lab and it was you know, so it was tritium

  • Or something that was actually relatively easy to clean up in the end

  • We ended up offering the guy a job and hiring him

  • but if this is astonishing

  • Admission and so I'm looking for people like that because even though the story could have been potentially embarrassing him at first

  • I was like do I have to call the hMS

  • It was he had hindsight the guy was very honest with me

  • and he told me what he did and why he did it and that he took responsibility for

  • Cleaning up the situation and not getting the lab closed down for a year, so you have to kind of learn

  • off-the-Cuff questions really help

  • asking people that kind of shakes them out and you find out a lot that way if you get somebody kind of off the

  • Normal mark for things they'll end up telling you something they've done. That was very

  • Fascinating that won't show up on the resume because they might have been embarrassed about it

  • And so that's one of the things that I definitely look for in a software person somebody who's done something that

  • Had nothing to do with their classes

  • And they did it because of their love for what software can do as we all recognize that now?

  • We're going we're in a real transition right now in the world

  • We're going from a world where open-source software has become de rigueur and people know how to go out and get software that can do

  • Certain tasks we know which type of software we can actually use we've watched the you know the evolution from hadoop to spark etcetera

  • things change over time but it's more and more open source for the

  • Sort of Pedestrian things that we need to do to exist in a cloud-based mobile world

  • That's about to happen to hardware and so you look at Nottingham University of Nottingham here

  • There's some fascinating work being done and added of manufacturing and new forms of manufacturing

  • I have teams that work on that the majority of the people that are on my teams working in 3D printing are software people and

  • It's because 3d printing if you're doing additive manufacturing and you're looking at merging masks customized with Mass production

  • Parts, so all the mass production parts are the same

  • Somebody's parts merge onto that in the end. You know it's that's easy enough to do

  • We're just going to snap those parts together like a lego set not that easy

  • How do you actually produce those parts? How do you track them? How do you validate them? How do you forensically?

  • Analyze them all of that takes

  • very strong algorithmic

  • Expertise it takes somebody who can actually put together the software in a modular fashion

  • And somebody who's smart enough to figure out?

  • I need to go look at what a manufacturing line looks like and see what they're they're addressing and so for me I

  • See a lot of this going on where people say yeah 3D printing

  • It's going to replace manufacturing no, it's not going to replace manufacturing

  • It's going to augment it if you look at what manufacturing is now

  • people have the largest capital assets most companies have if

  • Their manufacturing company is what they have in a manufacturing line. They've got robotics. They've got

  • You know very fast production line that assume the same product is going through multiple times

  • It's the old assembly line mentality and so everything has been streamlined optimized

  • Overproduced so that I can get as many parts through here as possible because I make more money if I do

  • That now goes away, and you say well, what do I do?

  • With you know let's say I've got a 30 year capital asset that I'm losing money off of if I get rid of it in

  • The next you know 10 20 30 years so that's a big part of what's going on is how we can merge?

  • What we're doing with additive manufacturing with existing manufacturing lines. It's not going to happen with hand-waving

  • It's going to happen with software and so that's a good example people

  • Who've actually addressed that that's one specific area look at healthcare for another one if we want to draw in other areas

  • So I've got teams working on what are called surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy sensors and what that basically is is these tiny little?

  • Nano fingers that when they collapse on an analyte

  • There's an enhancing effect by the materials that we use gold tips ETC and very small

  • You know just a few hundred nanometers in length for these fingers when an analyte or a simpson?

  • single chemical gets trapped inside of here

  • I Hit it with a laser light and the raman scattering that I get off of that is enhanced up to 10 to the 12 times

  • So up to a million million times

  • enhancement of the signal that I would normally get off of that analyte because of the architecture I put around that as

  • We start looking at that and you can see imagine the future

  • I've got some kind of a smart rag or a smart plastic surface that I just take rub across this table

  • Take it out and sense everything that was on the table right so it's going to make forensic analysis

  • Extremely fast and as you can see down the road that might include things like polymerase chain reaction or PCR

  • Which means that I can get automatic dna sequencing or rNa sequencing off of what I picked up if it's proteinaceous?

  • So there's a lot of different things that I can do with that technology all of that is software

  • Bioinformatics is what makes me be able to analyze the dnA in the rna all the normal signal processing that I would normally do for

  • Audio you know, so you're an audio expert. You know about that. You've got one key signal processing that's going on

  • I've got imaging which is 2d signal processing that comes on there, so I'm looking for those types of things when I bring in a

  • Candidate for hire, and I'm looking for somebody who's got of strength in one area and then

  • Breadth across the area and so people talk about this this is I'm pologize again to the non states people

  • This is States jargon. We look for a

  • T-Shaped software engineer which means somebody who's got a lot of Breadth in this direction and can go deep in one area for research

  • I'm looking for a comb shaped person, so once somebody has got that Breadth, but they can go deep in several areas now. They'll be

  • typically from my lab

  • They'll be a master or phd so we know they go deep in one area because they had to get that dissertation

  • Approved and they've got smart people like the professors here nodding him walking them through that

  • But I'm looking for somebody who also took it and went deep in another area so for example

  • somebody may be very interested in

  • Electrical engineering and because of their thesis they had to do one thing let's say working on you know

  • The sayers that I talked about the surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy

  • But because they were interested in signal processing they spent the rest of their time

  • Doing music and so they figured out how to build you know analog and digital circuits to do

  • Electronic music or something like that if I see something like that

  • then I know this person really is interested in that they're not just doing it because

  • It was a convenient path to a degree or a degree that they thought they'd have a you know livelihood in

  • And so we're really looking for that, and I try to throw students not you know with that

  • that being said I'm

  • One person and the other people on my interview team are going to be looking for those specific skills to make sure that they can't

  • Sneak away with that and so for me

  • I will typically cover the few areas that I'm qualified to look at Perhaps imaging perhaps or statistics or analytics

  • But other people on my team will be taking them very deep into what's under the hood in terms of a cloud deployment

  • They said they did right or what's under the hood for some type of an intelligent system that they?

  • Supposedly designed and in most cases you'll find out the student will admit very quickly

  • Oh, I actually relied on Bob or Susie or whoever to actually do some of that work

  • And they think that's they're afraid to bring that up in an interview as far as interviews go

  • That's that's when we know we've hit goal, right?

  • because we want people who can admit they need somebody else to get a big project on if

  • It's somebody who actually did the whole project by themselves hmM might not be that good of a project, right?

  • But if it's something where they worked with a bunch of other smart people, and that's what I've been lucky at in life

  • I've worked always with a lot of people smarter than me and the project that I'm working with you dig into the

  • Expertise they have in you're like wow

  • Thank you now. I don't have to sweat the details

  • I need to understand what you did

  • But I don't have to do the details and so we're looking for people who can admit?

  • They've actually worked with people and at least an area of their project who are better than them

  • And you're going to have to do that in life

  • we all know that and the farther you go in this field the smarter the people around you are you know unless you're

  • unfortunate that's if you're fortunate

  • And so you learn to tap into those people and make a bigger project counter that so you look at anything?

  • That's big you want to get into industry you've got to be on a big project that you've worked with a lot of other

  • Intelligent people on you can acknowledge them very well

  • And you can understand what they did without having to be an expert in that and so again

  • It's that Comme chez person you've got to know how to fill in those voids that you don't go deep in if you can do

  • That you're going to interview quite well at least for a research done

  • you mentioned about

  • Excelling in questions to catch people not necessarily all but just just to see what makes them tick and it was the way they might

  • mess that up

  • I mean, I'm assuming you want them to tell the truth of these you know you know not looking for big cover-Ups and stuff, so

  • Yeah, that's a great question and it is hard for somebody to hide and I think that's why people are honest when you give them

  • The you know kind of off-the-cuff question if some of them off-guard I'm looking for character

  • And so one of the things you can definitely do

  • To blow an interview is show that you don't have character, and so if I ask a question like that, and I say

  • What's the worst thing that ever happened and it becomes kind of a humblebrag where the person's like oh the worst thing

  • I ever did was I didn't catch that my colleague was cheating fast enough

  • That's not a good answer, right so so I'm not looking for those kind of humble bags

  • As I'm the one I mentioned before where a colleague had an incident and he cleaned it up and took responsibility

  • For its cleanup was shocking at first

  • But then I realized he had character because he knew how to follow through on that and so if somebody says oh well the worst

  • Thing that ever happened to me was something my colleague

  • Did or something this person did or the project failed because the people?

  • I was working with in follow through on it may well be true

  • That's probably not something you want to bring up in an interview in an interview you really want to focus on the way you

  • handled Adversity and brought that to a

  • decent conclusion

  • And we all run into adversity and by the way when some of the interviews and they tell me they work with a jerk

  • They're usually telling the truth

  • That's a tough one

  • And so if you see that they really were working with a jerk you try to see if they can find a way to steer

  • that into a positive because we have to do that we all work with jerks and life we might even be jerks occasionally and

  • you know we don't mean to be but we are and

  • So the way in which somebody is going to work with us when we are having a bad day like that

  • Or the way in which we work with somebody when they're clearly having an off day or life time is

  • Is really important and so we want to do is see that that person can actually handle that and move forward positively?

  • So if I don't see that in response to a question like that

  • That's one way of blowing it another way of blowing an interview would be for somebody to just be focusing on

  • What I would call the quantitative

  • Aspects of what they've done

  • They're really focused on the number of things they've done number of publications number of you know grants that they've got number of awards

  • They've won those types of things those are important

  • But if the person doesn't then go a level deeper and tell me what it was that

  • They did to get those awards or what they felt the award was about or who else should have shared in that award

  • That's another way to kind of blow an interview because you're going to be working with a team

  • You're be working with a bunch of people if we've done our jobs right hiring

  • They're going to be just as smart as you or on average right in the meet in the mean and so

  • it's a weird thing, but if you're actually in an interview

  • And you're spending too much time talking about yourself and not the people around you you're actually insulting the person interviewing you

  • You're not insulting the people you work with and this is a tricky one to

  • describe but I think if you stick with me here, you'll get it if you're

  • Acting like the interviewer like you're the best thing that's ever happened to their company you may well be right

  • You might be the best in that area

  • But you're also insulting them because you're implying the people they've already got working there or even the interviewer

  • Themselves because again you'll have technical interviewers are

  • Not as good as you so it's a it's a tricky one the balance you do want to come across positive

  • You want to show that you have that talent?

  • But you don't want to insult the person interviewing you or insult worse yet

  • The team that you haven't met and so I think that's a tricky one there you have to it's a delicate balance between humility

  • Proper humility and also being very self confident and so I'm looking for somebody who can be self confident

  • But not have to do it at the expense of others and so one of the ways of doing that in an interview is

  • obviously looking for

  • Ways to positively contribute

  • So if somebody tells me they've got a talent for this

  • They're like well the reason why I did that was my grandma needed something that would helped her stand up

  • And I realized that grandma did not have really good

  • Leg Muscles anymore and so what I had to do was going to be something that actually

  • Augmented her since some people could physically move around where somebody else said my grandma still have stolen muscles

  • But she has problem with her motor

  • You know her motor neurons

  • And so if I was able to stimulate those I could do that so it's an example from you know bionics or bio

  • You know some type of bio assist that would be a good example of it somebody who said oh, yeah

  • And by the way, I got an award for that

  • But that wasn't the reason I went into it right and so those are the types of things, so if you've got

  • applications for what you've done

  • That's a far better way to talk about it

  • Then in terms of the recognition you got from Society whether you won a scholarship or you won an award. Yes

  • We look at those yes, those matter, but they don't matter as much in an interview. We're looking at that

  • That's what got you to the interview

  • And so that's an important point to make

  • when we do interviews

  • they will depend on the location if we do an interview for

  • Example in the Bay area and San Francisco Bay area in the states will have a thousand

  • Candidates for a position and so if we're interviewing you you're already one in

  • 100 or one and two hundred or one and four hundred whatever it ends up being because of the number we hire in

  • We're pretty confident

  • You've got a good resume right and so the interview really goes beyond that resume or you wouldn't be there

  • Even in Colorado, which is the state?

  • I live in if we put out a position that has any interest to the software community

  • We'll have a hundred to 200 applicants and these are top people. I mean we get applicants who are like

  • Oh, I finished first in China this year on this particular software challenge Like China

  • That's there's a few people in that country

  • I think a lot of people come into an interview and one of the reasons

  • They fail some of what I was talking about before the humblebrag the giving proper attribution

  • Realigning what they were doing with an application is they forgot that we've already looked at hundreds of resumes

  • And we already like you right

  • So we're looking for something in the interview that wasn't in the resume so it's not just here's my resume job done

  • You meet me and then you know whether aside you basically said I resumes kind of like the headlines exactly now

  • Let's find out what this guy. Oh, this girl is like

  • Yeah

  • That's a great point and the thing to keep in mind is now you're competing against the best of the best of the best

  • Right so we've gone through those thousand resumes those thousand resumes presumably were qualified people from a much larger pool

  • And now we're interviewing three or four of you for the final job. If somebody's not local to you

  • How do you approach that if you have?

  • applicants

  • internationally or is it that they need to get to you or have that work just out in chess because we have also got a

  • Global audience here, so

  • Absolutely, well we do try to do a three-stage screening

  • And so we'll go through all the resumes and of course we want people from all over the world

  • There's you know there's brilliance everywhere

  • We'll do a phone screen to find out you know who the best of the best are and that will prevent them from having to

  • Travel or anything else

  • Some people are allowed to be distributed remotely, so I have a person, Indiana of a person in in Seattle

  • and a person in Chennai, India

  • You know then so these these are really good folks we've decided they can be there because they can successfully work from

  • You know from the remote spot most people will come into the bay area or Bristol Bristol uk here or Fort Collins

  • Colorado and work, and so will typically do is if they've got past in the phone screening

  • They got on to stage three which is the last stage before hire

  • We will pay for them to fly out to where we're going to do the interview

  • Typically the Bay area because that's where the bulk of our

  • Research effort is but it'll also be bristol uk or four columns depending on where we're going to bring them in to hire and so

  • We will hire

  • Internationally, but tend to ask them to relocate to one of our global offices and so it's really up to the person do they want

  • To make that move from let's say Malaysia to a let's say a china office in Shanghai do they want to make the move from?

  • We get some brilliant person who's let's say from Egypt we don't have a research operation

  • There are they willing to move from egypt to say Bristol uk so that's up to the person

  • But we do we do definitely encourage people from all over the world to come in because it's it's good for us

  • I mean a big part of what I've worked on the last three or four years in the quantitative standpoint for

  • Data analytics is looking at the impact of diversity on creativity, and it's huge so we know that

  • I mean, we know that the more diverse

  • Type of employee that we bring in the better overall products. We're going to get

  • Is much more powerful than for example two craters which were the state-of-the-art when I did my master's thesis because I was working on

  • Impedance tomography back then and I was killing the Craig computer

  • I had to actually chase students out with add music at 3 in the morning, so I could add two cray to myself

  • Nowadays you do that. I've got more power on my iphone than I ever had with your credit computer

A lot of people watching this channel might want to have a career in computing and you work in industry

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