【Engineer Interview】 What do LINE Fukuoka Data Analysis / Machine Learning Engineers Want to Take On?
[Notice] Effective October 1, 2023, LINE Fukuoka has changed its company name to LY Communications. Articles published on or before September 30, 2023 were written with our former company name.
LINE Fukuoka has a team that specializes in data analysis where data and machine learning engineers as well as data scientists play an active role. In this interview, we asked them about their careers up until now, and what they are working on in Fukuoka.
Career History and Reasons for Joining LINE Fukuoka
―Would you tell us about your careers up to this point, and how you came to join LINE Fukuoka?Career History and Reasons for Joining LINE Fukuoka
―Tateishi
After joining LINE Fukuoka, I briefly worked on server-side tasks using Perl and Java, and I also developed some Android applications. Besides all of this, I put together several demonstrations showing what we could do using machine learning, made proposals to our planners, and actually integrated this technology into our system.
After gaining all of this experience, I transferred to the Data Analysis Team at its launch in October of 2016, and am currently in charge of machine learning and analysis-related tasks.
When I heard that LINE had a development center in Fukuoka, I simply thought it was interesting. I heard from an acquaintance who was already working as a LINE engineer that the company’s interview test for engineering positions was really difficult and it got me interested, so I decided to give it a shot and applied for a position. So that’s how I came to work here.
I did analysis of malware on virtual machines, but in terms of data analysis, I did a lot of high-volume malware implementation on virtual environments, taking the data and determining what sort of malware was prevalent and how we should go about detecting it. It was kind of like using data to categorize malware.
After gaining that experience in Tokyo, I developed a columnar database compatible with MongoDB that was capable of writing queries at a Canadian company that makes database products.
When I started thinking about returning to Japan, one of the first companies I was fortunate enough to encounter was LINE Fukuoka.
―Ms. Lu, you joined the company from abroad, didn’t you?
I thought I might like to try SNS data analysis, but there was no such work at my previous job. At that time, I also didn’t really know the difference between Tokyo and Fukuoka. (Laughs) I learned about LINE Fukuoka from the recruiting representative, who told me a lot about both Fukuoka and the company’s work environment, and I decided to try working here. I had also wanted to try living in Japan since I was a child, so it worked out perfectly!
Next I transferred to a venture company that a university friend of mine had set up, where I worked on data analysis for various clients for about a year and a half. That company now has around 100 employees, but at that time there were fewer that 10 of us, so I was doing everything from analysis to sales and even contract drafting! (Laughs)
I was getting a lot of valuable experience, but for personal reasons, I wanted to make Fukuoka the base of my life. I also felt like I wanted to try doing analysis and improvement proposal for company-owned services rather than just data analysis for clients, so I decided to join LINE Fukuoka with its vast amount of information as well as many related services.
The Launch of the Data Analysis Team and New Efforts Originating in Fukuoka
Also, in a more infrastructural sense, there have been in-house requests to view collected data freely, so I look into how to configure servers when various people execute queries and resource management for the middleware side, or security for preventing people from seeing data that they shouldn’t.
Incidentally, the team I belong to is based in Fukuoka, but I often collaborate with Tokyo members in pursuing the actual work. In the Growth Hack project that I’m now mainly in charge of, I work with Tokyo’s LINE Data Labs data planners as a hub, having them connect me to various service-side staff and using our video conferencing system to share daily progress or conduct once weekly debriefings with the service-side, as well as taking once monthly business trips.
Even in a remote environment, we try to get creative by turning information into text on Wiki and chat rooms so that (to the extent possible) there is no gap in our understanding, or pair improvement proposals for service growth with analysis reports so that we do not simply end up with data.
Even before the Growth Hack undertaking began, we were receiving and responding to requests from each service for ad hoc or “shot” analysis (a type of short-term analysis), but the structure was basically us responding to the content of an order we received, and once we were finished, starting our response to another request for service analysis.
With the Growth Hack project, however, connections rapidly emerge between the original dots of our shot analysis content, since we continually track figures in order to achieve service KPIs. Because the project also progresses through the pairing of services and tags - from the upstream part of asking ourselves what we should analyze to the outcome of improvement proposals - from an analyzer’s standpoint, I think the places where we can feel a sense of unity with the services are interesting.
Data Analysis / Machine Learning Engineer Community in Fukuoka
Again, this is just my personal impression, but the atmosphere in Fukuoka now feels the same as Tokyo’s atmosphere did a few years ago when ”Big Data” and “data scientists” were all the buzz.
Right, a lot of people in other countries are doing data-related jobs, too, so if someone wanted to continue doing the same kind of job while living in Japan and learning more about it, I think they can feel at ease taking on that challenge at LINE Fukuoka: there are many highly skilled professionals from overseas working here.
What We Want to Do, and Motivation at LINE Fukuoka
There is a Machine Learning Team in Tokyo’s LINE Data Labs which mainly does machine learning-related tasks, but I hope that even in Fukuoka, I can take on some sort of challenge that will be valuable to the field of machine learning.
Currently, about 10% of LINE Fukuoka’s total workforce is from overseas, and as is the case with Ms. Lu, many engineers have joined the company from abroad. I think we can utilize the cultures, practices, and mindsets of various countries that we learn from them in the analysis of globally released services.
From the opposite viewpoint, if we could also (for example) turn business improvement-oriented data analysis for the many contact centers in Kyushu into an example, then an “only in Fukuoka” data analysis genre may be established.
Since I just joined the company and am still a newbie among the other members, I’m always thinking of simply continuing to improve my skills. I’m also really interested in the machine learning sector, so I hope to study it while working on my assigned tasks.
When we say machine learning and data analysis, some people may get the impression that we do a lot of difficult work or that they would need highly specialized skills, but that’s not necessarily the case. We would like to work with people who don’t limit themselves by deciding that something is impossible right away just because it seems difficult, and who rather have confidence in what they can do and pursue it.
Also, if an engineer suggests something that they would like to try, the open environment at LINE Fukuoka allows them to freely take on that challenge, so you can build a broad knowledge.
However, since we are still a small team, I would love to have people who are hungry to try taking on challenges with a “start-up” mentality join us. I think at this stage, that kind of person would make the best fit.
Date and Time: Saturday, July 22, 2017; 2 P.M. – 5:30 P.M.
Venue:【Tokyo/Shinjuku】 LINE Corp. HQ
Content:
・The Data Analysis Teams in Tokyo and Fukuoka
・User Interest Extraction and Visualization Via Large-Scale Text Mining
・Lead up to Implementation of PySpark in Apache Zeppelin
・The Growth Hack Project Implemented through Tokyo - Fukuoka Collaboration
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LINE Fukuoka is always looking for engineers. Please check out our available positions and related links below.
https://linefukuoka.co.jp/ja/career/list/engineer/data_engineer
*Other Available Engineering Positions
https://linefukuoka.co.jp/ja/career/list/