Epic reviews

3.3

52% would recommend to a friend

(6,032 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 6,032 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
4.0
Sep 11, 2012
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I have seen projects that I have contributed to benefit end users of our software; I think that in my own way I have had an impact on the patient care for the organizations I have worked with. That is one of the aspects of working at Epic that keeps me coming back. I find the need to build relationships with the team members from the customers challenging at times, however I think that some of the biggest leaps I have made in my personal growth have come from learning how I interact with others and communicate in order to accomplish projects. While many of my tasks are driven by outside forces, like my customer needs or healthcare initiatives, I have a significant level of autonomy for how I approach those tasks and what skills of mine I use to complete my work.

Cons

It took me a while to learn how to manage my time, I experienced significant frustration stemming from small tasks taking charge of my days and pushing off the interesting stuff. I find that this is a challenge that never really goes away, in a customer facing role. It can be easy to lose sight of the big picture and get mired down in issues coming in from customers and internal projects. While I enjoy learning to build better relationships with my customers, it can also be one of the frustrating aspects of the Technical Services role. I have had specific individuals who occupied significant amounts of my time for explanation, training, etc. and ultimately did not follow through in a manner that benefited the project. When this is a person who is outside your control, it can lead to frustration.

2.0
Sep 10, 2012
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Good pay right out of college - Beautiful campus - Good, inexpensive dining options - You get lots of responsibilities early on - Decent training - You feel like you are making a difference at times - Smart, helpful co-workers - Decent benefits

Cons

- Long hours. There is a sense of competition at Epic on who can get to work earliest and stay latest. There is no work-life balance. - No career advancement opportunities. You basically start in one role and can never advance from there. - Bad management. Your team is likely to be a 22-year old that knows nothing about managing people on a team but will force you to do useless team building and work plan related stuff. - Even if you are performing well, one negative review from a customer or co-worker can basically put you in a negative light with your team lead and it is extremely difficult to get out of that situation. - Ancient technology. You will work with VB6 (not even supported by Microsoft anymore) and Cache (obscure language useful only at Epic), which will extremely limit your job opportunities after you leave Epic. -Non-compete clause. After leaving Epic, you will have to wait out a one-year non-compete clause, meaning you can't work for any of Epic's customers or competitors for a full year. - You will be given so much work that you will work 60 hours a week but still feel like that is not enough. Then your TL will “ask” you to take on a project or lead a workgroup, at which point you have to say yes, or else s/he will ask you at the next meeting to take on a different, even more time-consuming, project. When you take on this project and don’t break, s/he will ask you to take on another project or customer, until eventually you can’t handle it and start getting negative reviews for being “slow” or “unresponsive”. - Unfair practices. I know someone who got fired over an incident, but when another person did almost the EXACT same thing, she was barely warned. - Too many unnecessary processes. You will have to deal with many unnecessary processes that you didn't even know existed, which can make you miss deadlines. - Frequently asked to work nights and weekends. This is especially true for weekends, because hospitals like to "go live" on Epic on the weekends since there is less user traffic. You will be asked to support these "go-lives" every month or so, so be prepared to work at least one weekend a month. - No recognition. The only way to know you're doing well at Epic is the amount of work your TL is assigning you. If you get a fifth customer, you're probably doing something right. If you get assigned as a "guru" to maintain documentation for multiple new functionalities, at least you know you're doing well enough to get assigned all these new tasks. That's the only recognition you'll get for doing good work--more work! - It's in Wisconsin. If you're from the West or East coast or from a big city (I am), then you may find Wisconsin less than exciting. - You can't keep your matching 401k until you work for Epic at least 3 years, but rarely does an employee reach 3 years. Even then, you only get to keep 25% of the match. - You can't cash in your sick days when you leave Epic unless you have accumulated over 60 something days (which means about 12 years at Epic if you don't ever get sick). - High turnover rate. Epic fires employees left and right, and people burn out very quickly, so expect to keep getting new people that barely know anything on your team. - "Technical Services" role is basically tech support--users will call in with questions and you will just troubleshoot either on the phone or through email all day, every day, all week, every week, all year, every year. If this is your type of thing, then I guess it could be a pro, but Epic sells the position as so much more that it is disappointing to find yourself on the phone all day with incompetent users day in and day out. - They will not pay for your education. Don't expect Epic to be company to pay for your MBA or Masters in software engineering. They just want to work you to death and don't care how your progress in your career or personal development.

2.0
Sep 10, 2012

Great Experience, but Employees are not Valued

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great Employees. Challenging and exciting work. Beautiful Campus. Fun and unique work culture. Good pay and benefits.

Cons

Terrible work/life balance. Don't plan on having a life outside of Epic if you work there. Employees are not valued and treated as a dime a dozen. Too many people without proper management and career experience are in positions of leadership, and there is a very secretive management culture.

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