Santa Claus is Scrumming to Town: Bert Koehler on How Santa’s Helper is Like Agile Coaching
Bert Koehler may seem like an Agile coach and scrum master with Daugherty, but he’s actually one of Santa’s helpers.
Daugherty Profile Series: James Ding
"You are not here to be a copy machine. You are here to lead and change the industry." Continue watching to hear what else software engineer James Ding has to say about Daugherty.
Daugherty Profile Series: Alex Soltani
"...in a year and a few months, I feel like I've gotten 4-5 years experience on my resume." Continue watching to see what else senior consultant Alex Soltani has to say about being a part of Team Daugherty.
Let Me Be Clear: Shannon Moore on How Business Analysis Makes Her a Better Writer for Children’s Literature
When Shannon Moore isn’t serving as a business analyst or data steward at Daugherty, she writes nonfiction for grades 6 through 12 (aka kidlit).
Daugherty Profile Series: Samantha Weller
Associate consultant Samantha Weller discusses how working in programming and data science doesn't lead to a mundane career. She believes it's crucial to use critical thinking and creativity in every project.
Landing on Both Feet: The Parallels of Skateboarding and Product Ownership
A lot of people consider a skateboard a toy. To Josh Beaudry, it’s a tool for transforming lives.
Daugherty Profile Series: Nathan Brown
"Data Science as a field is still maturing. The fact that it's so new means that people are still even working on the definition of it." Continue watching to see what Nathan Brown thinks about working in the Data Science field at Daugherty.
Daugherty Profile Series: Bronson Lane
kim.hunley Oct 16, 2019 at 3:18 PM (edited)
"I always wanted to make mobile apps growing up and being able to do that as my job (and getting paid for it) is way cooler than sitting in my basement making something work." Continue watching to see what Bronson Lane thinks about #TeamDaugherty.
Daugherty in the House — Robert “D.J. cAMP-o” on the “Original Mix” to Software Engineering
Robert Campo has worked with software development for 10 years. He likes it because every day brings a different problem to solve, and new technologies are constantly sprouting up. It keeps things fresh — fresh like a beat.