Epic reviews

3.3

52% would recommend to a friend

(6,045 total reviews)
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Judith R. Faulkner

69% approve of CEO

75% positive business outlook

Epic has an employee rating of 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 6,045 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Epic employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Informationstechnologie industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

6K reviews
2.0
Apr 14, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Surface level things: * Nice and interesting campus * Healthy, cheap, good quality food with variety * Work can be intellectually stimulating, you get learn about the world of American medical industry. * Step in the door of the medical IT world, if you're really interested in that sort of thing. Not really true to QA though.

Cons

* Really toxic work culture. You're surrounded by A-type personalities in a competitive environment where you are measured against your colleagues. Lots of backstabbing, attempts to look the best. Everyone is constantly on the defensive in order to protect themselves from dreaded bad feedback or performance dings. The feedback system is secretive and incoming feedback is curated by TLs to create a narrative to manipulate you, it is easily abused to beat people down. * Epic plays this charade of being an open-minded place, but in reality it is a pretty authoritarian environment where loyalty to the company line and policy is valued above all else. Inadvertently going against that line or not displaying enough enthusiasm for your job as if its the meaning of your life can get you into some trouble with your TL if they are a "true believer." Its a little of like living in a Communist state where everyone tries to pretend to believe the party line. * Mental health issues are a real issue here due to the low levels of trust, fear-based management, impossible expectations, and chronic overwork. * Inexperienced management - your TLs will most likely be 20-something year olds who were promoted based on their unrelated work performance and blind loyalty to the company. Many don't know what they're doing or how to manage people. Many can easily be toxic. * Senior management doesn't care about you - senior leadership fought very hard to prevent work from home. TLs who spoke up for work from home for their colleagues were purged and demoted. This shows everyone how little they care or value about your personal safety, health, or sanity or of their customers during a pandemic when they sent their employees on go-lives to assist face to face with hospital workers. This is a huge red flag. You are only there to be exploited before being churned out. They are happy to burn through new hires in 1-2 years, either resulting in them quitting due to burn-out or for saving their sanity. * Impossible work expectations - Your expected workload will steadily increase every 6 months/year you are at Epic. Many of your assignments will be things you'll have never seen before and you are magically expected to be a "subject matter expert" afterwards. You'll eventually fall behind and be purged from the company as a low performer or devote your entire life to working to meet the expectations. Choice is yours. * Most of your colleagues are not planning to stay, partly due to the reasons listed above once they figure out what Epic is really like. Also, most are very young and will leave shortly. This also deprecates the culture as there is a constant churn of new faces which can make many people pretty cold, distant, and cynical. If you are smart enough to work at Epic, you can do better at other places. Once you figure that out, you won't stay for very long. QA specifically is pretty low on the totem pole. You're utterly expendable, respected less than technical roles, your bonus is peanuts compared to other roles. You'll be underappreciated despite the work you do in keeping Epic's software working correctly. Recently, QA TLs were placed under IS supervision and the independent department was eliminated - just to give you an idea how you are valued. Don't waste your professional life trying to be a QA'er, you'll get more respect going into the field you actually studied for in school.

3.0
Feb 8, 2021

Extremely mixed bag

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Pays very well and there is always lots to do. If you are a type A personality, you're more likely to thrive here. Hiring is highly competitive so one of the under-recognized perks is highly competent co-workers. Food services are amazing and steeply discounted (yes, this perk is worth mentioning). The campus is cool, but you kind of get over it after a month or so. You're likely to get your own office or share with at most 1 other person (preference is accounted for), but this might not be a "pro" for everyone. The job is impactful. Epic is the most influential EMR company in the US (and maybe the world) and effectively does a lot more than just manage the software. Epic has a lot of influence and gives lots of guidance on how hospitals make operational decisions.

Cons

Epic is struggling to balance being a large company against the scrappy close-knit company it wants to believe it is. Upper management is either struggling to or unwilling to take feedback from the general workforce. Covid restriction handling is the most emblematic case. Epic was slow to allow workers to work from home, and was stingy in extending to remote work. They also pushed aggressively to come back to campus at the end of summer even though the trajectory of cases was not favorable. Employees had poor/limited choices for voicing their dissent and were effectively gagged. Epic is anti-union and it is reflected in numerous policy and operations decisions. You will have to fight fiercely for your own work/life balance. Epic will always ask for more and rigidly adheres to old-school thinking when it comes to work efficiency. It is an unwritten but well established expectation for you to work 45+ hours every week at minimum (and frequently more). Law of diminishing returns be damned and frequent burn out abound. Epic also struggles with diversity and inclusivity. Yes, they are based in WI which is predominantly white, but they hire from all over the country and even the world. After 7 years, I can count the number of black people I have interacted with on 1 hand. This came into focus at the company in the summer of 2020, but before the end of the year the efforts for inclusivity and diversity were already being undermined. Epic is unwilling to allow substantive change to occur.

2.0
Oct 2, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great pay and benefits, especially if you like to travel

Cons

Within my first 6 months, half of the POC on my team were fired for flimsy reasons.

Viewing 379 - 381 of 6,045 Reviews

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