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Analog Devices &42 Silicon Valley:A Case Study
With a focus on bridging the physical and digital worlds to solve the toughest challenges, semiconductor company Analog Devices, Inc. (ADI) is a global innovation leader in the design and manufacturing of analog, mixed-signal, and digital signal processing (DSP) integrated circuits used in virtually all types of electronic equipment. Since their inception in 1965, they have built deep expertise, collaborative problem-solving capabilities, and developed a cutting-edge portfolio of technologies that sense, measure, interpret, connect, power, and secure the world around us. Headquartered in Norwood, Massachusetts, ADI has over 4,700 patents worldwide, 125,000 customers, and a reported revenue of over $6 billion in 2018.
ADI contributes their growth to increasing integration, or putting more and more analog and mixed-signal functionality on a single chip. The Precision Analog Products (PRA) group at ADI has a campus in San Jose, California, in the heart of Silicon Valley. The precision amplifiers and control circuits that the PRA group develops can be found in portable defibrillators, PDAs and laptop computers, MRI and CT scanners, space vehicles, broadband network switches, cellular radio base-stations, sonar and radar systems and in specialized scientific instruments.
In 2018, ADI acquired OtoSense, a specialist in sound recognition via deep learning. Thor Whalen,
Director of AI Research, is responsible for the exploration of sound and vibration data and building
models that are able to produce meaning from this sound and vibration. This is mainly to do things like
categorize sounds, detect sound events, identify outliers, etc. that help customers detect malfunctions
or issues well before a potentially catastrophic event occurs. This technology helps improve their
productivity, efficiency, and reduce equipment replacement costs or unnecessary routine maintenance.
Whalen has been involved in the hiring of student interns from 42 Silicon Valley and shared insights into their process and how our students helped fulfill a hiring need.
ANALOG DEVICES: BRIDGING DIGITAL AND ANALOG
ADI employees are driven to solve the toughest
challenges for their customers, so they seek top talent
who are driven to continuously learn and look beyond
the immediate problem to better understand the entire
challenge.The technical needs that the company has
for interns changes quite often. Thor shared that in his
division at ADI they have a reoccurring need for people
trained in C, but that frontend (JS) and backend (Python)
developers are something they are currently in need of. Whalen explained that before 42, they did
what most do, hiring someone and seeing if it worked out during a trial period. That approach wasn’t
working that well because they needed more of a screening process. Thor first heard about 42 after
they had an intern from France who told him about the school. She mentioned that they may want to
check out the students at 42 Silicon Valley and that they would most likely be interested in internships.
THE CHALLENGE: STREAMLINING THE INTERN HIRING PROCESS
Thor shared that when they decided to recruit students from 42 Silicon Valley for internships, they were
able to develop a better hiring process, “With 42 from the beginning, I started to hire through a process
that really worked well for us. I would come to 42 Silicon Valley’s campus and give a quick presentation
of what our company was about. Then I gave a 42 minute “impossible project,” basically something
quite hard, essentially to see how they would react, how they would use their time and what choices
they’d make. I also asked people to send me their CVs and there was a short list of people who would
move on to an 8-hour test. The test is also quite hard but divided into steps, in case some were not able to
complete the entire test. I asked them regularly commit their code for the test on GitHub, with questions
on a general slack channel where everyone could see the questions and subsequent answers. We
would review the code and see who was interested in the internship.” According to Whalen, most of the
time the internships work out and some of the 42 interns ended up moving to regular contracting work or
getting hired. He explained that this basically allowed him to reduce the uncertainty of the entire process.
THE DECISION: RECRUIT STUDENTS FROM 42 SILICON VALLEY
According to Whalen, 42 has been his main
source of interns ever since, “We recruit students
from 42 for a variety of backgrounds and an
emphasis on pragmatism rather than theoretical,
and an ability to get things done.” The students of
42 tend to be task-oriented, collaborative, and know where to look, who to ask, what to ask, and what
to learn to get the job done. When it comes to technical skills, there have been some strong profiles
when it comes to coding skills. Whalen recognizes that it is important to have high-level technical skills
in addition to having the basic bricks of development. Thor shared how one of the first interns that
they took on board from 42 Silicon Valley, Eung Bum Lee, has been successful in all the projects that
have been given to him. He elaborated, “With a project for an autonomous vehicle, Lee worked on
an online incremental outlier detector, translated models from python to C, wrote python wrappers
for C code, and worked on backend processes for data. Overall he has worked on many different
aspects, most recently a general IoT platform for edge devices.” Not only has 42 helped streamline
the hiring process for interns at Analog Devices, but they also produce interns that are able to get the
job done and have a more hands-on approach to learning. Because of this, Whalen said that they
would be interested in taking on more 42 interns in the future because it has worked for him so far.
RESULTS: HIRING PEOPLE WHO HAVE THE ABILITY TO GET THINGS DONE