| I've probably interviewed about 70-100 such people in the past year and a half. Exactly 1 such person was qualified (I hired him). The issue in my view is the following: people who know both statistics and computer science are extremely rare. People who actually understand statistics are rare. I can probably weed out 1/3 to 1/2 of candidates simply by asking what a p-value is, or what precision/recall are (this includes people who said they worked in search). Of the ones who know basic stats, most are neither good at nor interested in programming. They just want to use existing libraries to crunch numbers in a Jupyter notebook, then hand that off to the developers. Finding a person who can come up with a predictive model, understand what they did, optimize it without breaking it's statistical validity and deploy it to production is very hard. (If you can do this, I'm hiring in Pune and Delhi. Email in my profile.) |
(not sure I can defend somebody that does not know what precision/recall are)