Hello,
I wanted to know what do PIs/recruiters/fellow bioinformaticians look for when hiring NGS-Bioinformaticians.
Do we expect the Bioinformatician to be skilled in wet-lab/sequencing and an expert in data processing with respect to NGS only or do we want someone who knows everything that is to know in Biology, statistics and coding and are able to carry out -omics analysis?
Speaking of coding, is knowing one language thoroughly good enough for now or do we also need to know to code C++, Java, R, MySQL etc? I know my colleagues when recruiting NGS Bioinformaticians expect candidates to know detailed coding which is of a developer's standard as well as develop algorithms. I feel these are more of computational biologists or developers than NGS Bioinformaticians.
Meanwhile, candidates who have higher education (Masters/PhD), good CVs and good publications in reputed journals on being asked on coding, say they know only shell for data manipulation and mostly string a bunch of open-source software together to generate reports (BWA-Picard-GATK-Annotation) and they need to look up the internet to write some basic codes - do we hire them?
It would be insightful to know what is expected from a Bioinformatician, specially when a few of us feel this
Are you asking this question from the view point of a recruiter or a candidate? Since you seem to refer to both sides alternately in this question.
BTW: It is perfectly ok in my book to be an applied bioinformatician. Someone who knows enough about data/tools/biology to make it all work, with minimal programming knowledge (and some help from Biostars!).
a new recruiter... but could end up as a candidate at some point with time.
Nandini, keep in mind that a job title such as 'NGS Bioinformatician' immediately implies that it's just an analyst role. You will most likely not have any input on the leadership or direction of the group. I see that job title used a lot in the UK, less so the USA (I'm also in London).
yes I agree that a NGS Bioinformatician title in UK is very vague/general and that;s why my curiosity. We just conducted an interview last week and it was my first time being on the panel. The job was advertised for data processing and developing pipelines using open source software and validation - very basic. I was taken aback when one of us asked questions relating to a developer's profile
I don't think there's much of a general rule, it depends on the job, its requirements and its environment. Some PIs/recruiters have a clear view of what they need/want and some don't. Often recruiters also have to modulate their expectations based on the type of applications they get and their budget: highly skilled/competent/experienced people tend to be more expensive :)
Yes, indeed, all I can say is that each role has a job spec and expectations of the candidate. If one accepts a role that's clearly advertised as a data processing analyst, then that it all that you'll be doing. Other roles may mention things like 'leadership', 'negotiating skills', etc, which would imply a more important and central role.
They should be familiar with all the software and tools listed on their resume, and preferably be able to list examples of when and why they used each of them.
This is a good question actually. In particular the desire for bioinformaticians to have professional software development level skills is very offputting were I to be looking for a bioinformatics role.
I'm a wet lab biologist who enjoys learning to code and doing bioinformatics. I'm at the level I'd consider applying for a 'bioinformaticians' role, but I certainly wouldn't describe myself as a computational biologist or similar. I have no qualifications in anything CompSci or even in bioinformatics (excluding the fact that I'm doing some for my PhD).
I'd be interested to hear what group leaders here would have to say about this level of (in)competence!