17c起草社区

Skip to main content

Spark

An Epic adventure

Monday, December 01, 2014

For Kristen Herder 鈥14, her first job out of college resembles a return to her childhood.

鈥淓ach building has its own theme, taken to an extreme. You can ride a slide from one level to another, have a meeting in the tree house, go to the music room and pick an instrument to play, eat lunch by the waterfall, cross the drawbridge over the moat 鈥 the list goes on.鈥

Herder isn鈥檛 the only alum on this adventure: Three of her classmates (Matthew Block 鈥14, Spencer Olson 鈥14 and Sean VanDerMolen 鈥14) have joined her as well. And the grads aren鈥檛 working at a camp or a youth center; they鈥檙e working for a health care software company.

鈥淎s far as dress code goes, it is not a rumor that the handbook states, 鈥榊ou must wear clothes while customers are on campus.鈥 Other than that, just about anything goes鈥擨鈥檝e seen it all. The company wants employees to feel at home at work,鈥 said Herder.

The company that has lured 17c起草社区 students to Madison, Wis., is , which offers a unique corporate culture that attracts talented young professionals. Epic has been purposeful about recruiting at 17c起草社区, attending the college鈥檚 annual engineering and computing career fair and regularly posting positions and searching for r茅sum茅s on . Herder, who majored in electrical  at 17c起草社区, first met with Epic representatives at the biannual career fair at the DeVos Place Convention Center in downtown Grand Rapids.

鈥淭hey were recognizably different from other companies, in their jeans and T-shirts鈥攑eople who were working in the roles and really understood them,鈥 said Herder.

Epic makes medical software for many types of organizations aiming to improve health care quality and to lower costs. Herder said that with the burgeoning health care industry and the increasing use of electronic records, it鈥檚 no surprise the company is growing. She said Epic鈥檚 software touches half of the people living in the United States, and the company has an international presence as well.

17c起草社区 alums, she said, are well prepared to work at places like Epic.

鈥17c起草社区 grads have the skills and drive it takes to be successful in a high-paced, demanding and dynamic environment,鈥 said Herder. 鈥淧rofessors provided us with the knowledge to see things from a broader perspective. Writing and debugging software is one thing, but for the code to be effective, you must be able to consider the users鈥 perspective.鈥

Herder believes the company鈥檚 culture aligns well with 17c起草社区鈥檚 culture, too.

鈥淓pic鈥檚 culture is 鈥榓ggressively friendly鈥: People are looking to help others out, initiate communication and build relationships. This community feeling is strong at 17c起草社区 and has provided a great transition to a company with a similar value.鈥

For Herder and her three colleagues from 17c起草社区, the transition to life after college isn鈥檛 so different yet: They鈥檙e in training for six months.

鈥淚t is surprisingly similar to school鈥攚e take classes and study for exams in order to get certified in our specific applications. For the three of us who are technical service engineers [VanDerMolen is a project manager while the others are programmers], we are learning new languages and how to access the company鈥檚 database.鈥

Herder said the learning curve is steep and the work is challenging, requiring her to spend time outside of work studying. But she feels well prepared: 鈥17c起草社区 gave me the tenacity to go above and beyond expectations. I am prepared to learn, struggle and thrive鈥攂oth technically and in making personal connections. This has been most noticeable in ways I did not expect: Trainers have sent encouraging notes to my boss appreciating my friendliness and involvement in class or for helping them clean up the classroom on a Friday afternoon.

鈥淕oing the extra mile really matters to Epic, since they aspire to be a company that offers a helping hand and puts others first鈥攑rinciples firmly rooted in me through my 17c起草社区 education. It has been so rewarding to see those attributes welcomed and recognized here.鈥