
Ansel Santosa鈥檚 bosses at were knocked out by their new hire. He was both a hard-core software engineer and a team-builder with people skills, a coveted mix at the pioneering data analytics firm. 鈥淲here can we find more of you?鈥 they asked him. The 2013 iSchool Informatics alumnus didn鈥檛 hesitate. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a whole school of people like me,鈥 said Santosa.
He told them about the UW鈥檚 interdisciplinary iSchool, where students 鈥 while mastering everything from coding and data management to user experience design 鈥 meet industry insiders and engage in the collaborative group work expected in today鈥檚 project-oriented tech companies.
鈥淭he classes at the iSchool prepared me for really working well with partners on a team and for the issues people in industry are facing,鈥 says Santosa, a front-end software engineer who soon after landing at ExtraHop began recruiting fellow iSchool alumni to his UI (user interaction) team.
There are now nine iSchool alumni working full-time at the company. Santosa, highly active in recruiting at the company, is intent on seeing more hired.
鈥渋School graduates can ramp up quickly,鈥 Santosa says. 鈥淭here鈥檚 not as much cultural or communication overhead before you can start actually talking about the work that needs to be done.鈥
With their interdisciplinary training, iSchool graduates at ExtraHop are able to tackle multiple fields, points out 2015 Informatics graduate Robby Brosman. He compares graduates to all-purpose 鈥淪wiss Army knives.鈥 They have tools for almost everything. 鈥淏ecause the iSchool approach is so holistic, I know how to interact with project managers, do UX (user experience) and UI (user interface), and how to develop code at the same time. That鈥檚 one of the reasons I joined the iSchool, so I could do both design and code,鈥 says the software engineer, who works with Santosa and other alumni on the UI team.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 something noticeable about all of us who come from the iSchool,鈥 says Mike Kelly, a 2015 graduate of the iSchool鈥檚 Master of Science in Information Management program who works on the company鈥檚 product team, focusing on UX design. 鈥淲e鈥檙e all design-minded.鈥
ExtraHop company founders Jesse Rothstein and Raja Mukerji launched the Seattle-based data analytics company in 2007 as a platform for addressing the growing complexity of large-scale data management in IT environments, where tens of thousands of networked servers and devices may be in operation at once, communicating in multiple layers of conversation. 鈥淭here are all these things that can go wrong in all these layers,鈥 says software engineer Alex Burner, a 2015 Informatics graduate and web developer working with the UI team.
ExtraHop independently monitors all that heavy traffic in real-time and structures this active 鈥渨ire data鈥 into easy-to-digest visuals. Where are the spikes? Where are the anomalies? If there鈥檚 a traffic jam, a slowdown, or an accident on a client鈥檚 big-data highway, the ExtraHop appliance quickly isolates and presents the source of the problem as it is unfolding. 鈥淵ou essentially plug ExtraHop into a network and it figures out what all the hosts and network devices are, and who is talking to who about what, and how all the distributed applications and services on the network are performing, and it does it all really fast,鈥 says Kelly.
Monitoring data-in-flight can quickly identify problems-in-the-making: a cyber-intruder in hospital records, a blip in live Netflix streaming, a jammed computer program that keeps airplanes from getting clearance for takeoff, or a dysfunctional checkout page for an online retailer.
鈥淲hat happens as a Dev Ops (development operations) engineer when your boss tells you at 4:59 p.m. that customers can鈥檛 check out and your company is losing thousands of dollars a minute?鈥 says Brosman. 鈥淲ith ExtraHop you can see everything that is happening. You don鈥檛 have to guess; you have solid evidence.鈥
It is, he says, 鈥渢he eyes on your datacenter.鈥
Brosman points to one children鈥檚 hospital where a systems slowdown left doctors waiting almost 20 minutes to log on to their computers while they were seeing patients. An ExtraHop analysis quickly drilled down to the problem: one doctor at the hospital had loaded 20 gigs of personal files onto his cloud drive, which were downloaded every time he logged on. It bottlenecked the entire system.
It took ExtraHop 15 minutes to find the problem and solve it. 鈥淭he cool part about real-time analytics is that you don鈥檛 have to wait for results,鈥 Brosman says.
Offering what it calls 鈥渂ig data without the big headache,鈥 ExtraHop serves some of the biggest corporate IT departments in the world, with clients including Sony Network Entertainment, Morgan Stanley, Lockheed Martin, AT&T, Adobe, Microsoft, and McKesson. Hospitals are also major clients. ExtraHop can help identify their technical issues before they impact clinical workflow or patient care, says Kelly. 鈥淗ospitals are constrained by budgets and tend not to be resource-rich in IT. But it鈥檚 mission critical. When something goes wrong, it鈥檚 always urgent.鈥
ExtraHop is expanding at dizzying speeds. Last year alone, the streaming analytics firm added more than 150 employees and expanded into new global territories including Germany, Belgium, The Netherlands, Singapore, Australia, and New Zealand. The company is buzzing, the pace is fast, and iSchoolers describe jumping into action immediately upon landing. 鈥淲hen I first took this job, I had no clue about the things I鈥檇 be touching,鈥 says Brosman. 鈥淓ven in the first six months, I鈥檝e done crazy stuff I鈥檇 never have imagined I鈥檇 be doing.鈥
At more established companies, he might be working on improving existing products, says Ashish Chandwani, a 2014 Informatics graduate who works on web properties and services at ExtraHop. 鈥淓very few days here, we have to come up with a solution from scratch.鈥
Employees are encouraged to chase their ideas, say iSchool alumni. 鈥淚f you show interest in something here, you can dive right in and start tackling problems,鈥 says Kelly, who helped build an advanced new appliance for search capability while still working part-time. 鈥淚t really hit on the things I studied at the iSchool like information architecture, searchability, and browsing. And even though I was only working a couple days a week, I was able to contribute to this big new feature and see it through the pipeline.鈥
Santosa, who is a senior engineer after only a few years at the company, was still an intern when he began building a new user-friendly code feature. By the time his internship ended, the feature was already in customer hands. 鈥淚 could come in as an intern, design and build something, have the full support of my team, and get actual customer support all before I was a full-time employee. It was so rewarding.鈥
The quick uptake and output of iSchool colleagues doesn鈥檛 surprise Chandwani. 鈥淚f you look at our staff, you see that people from the iSchool tend to be self-driven and creative,鈥 he says.
They鈥檙e also highly skilled at making technology human-friendly and tailoring it to clients鈥 needs. It鈥檚 ingrained in them during their studies at the iSchool. 鈥淭his is all the stuff the school caters to: getting stakeholders involved, listening to their concerns, being proactive,鈥 says Chandwani, who has also begun recruiting friends from the school to work at ExtraHop. 鈥淎t the iSchool, It鈥檚 not just can you write code, but can you write code that matters for the people you are writing it for?鈥
ExtraHop Director of Engineering Bhushan Khanal has witnessed what iSchool graduates are capable of. His company is reaping the rewards. 鈥淎t ExtraHop, our platform, and by extension, our customers, have benefited tremendously from the skill and talent of our iSchool alumni.鈥