Epic reviews

3.3

52% would recommend to a friend

(6,025 total reviews)
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Judith R. Faulkner

68% approve of CEO

74% positive business outlook

Epic has an employee rating of 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 6,025 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
1.0
Nov 12, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good for people who are reasonably intellegent and want to work very very hard. If you are a B student, who is not afraid to work long hours on really tedious stuff to make good money then this job is for you.

Cons

I may be spoiled by some of the awesome places I worked before and since joining Epic and I was probably way over qualified to work at Epic, but I found Epic to be the most tedious work I've experienced in my life. Epic has a culture and the right kind peer pressure to get people to work way more than they would want to. Most people in my role were way over worked. I'm a very gifted person, but I found the amount of work dished out to Ambulatory TS would require 60 to 80 hours/week to do it correctly though the recruiters promised less than 45. Most everyone in my role who has been there less than 3 years was stressed and overworked. If you want to have family life do not take a job there. As a TS, you always have to be there from 9 to 5. But you also have to put in many extra hours to get your work done. I decided to hold my work to the 45 hours per week to see how long I could hold on. In practice, this meant prioritizing so that only the most urgent things would ever get done, ultimately resulting unsatisfactory work. You are pressured to not take vacation in big clumps, but rather one or two days in a week. When you take a day off your work piles up so you have to work extra long on subsquent days to make up for it. Hense, there are *no* real vacation days. I think what Epic is doing should be illegal. The code base is *very* poorly designed and documented. It can not be commented on because that slows the ancient code. Worse, the code is not written in a nice modular fashion. It must be getting more and more unmanagable with each passing year. Different parts of the code duplicate functions in inconsistenet ways. It takes a long time to fix or change the simplest things because there are always a lot of unintended consequences. It is difficult for people to build code that interacts properly with all the other parts. Because developement is so troublesome they have to rely greatly on quality assurance testing to find bugs, on technical services to fix things, and on a lot of work to produce on a reasonable time scale. Because it is such a tangled mess, nothing can be sufficiently documented and a great deal of *research*, trial, and errror has to be done to fix things. I believe this is why their work ethic is currently so extreme. Because there is not enough time for individuals to get their work done, it is a very poor environment for innovation. I'm a world expert in another field, well respected for my innovations. But at Epic, I deliberately held back ideas because I did not want to add any more workload to myself. Most of Epic's innovations consist of listening to customer requests and implementing them in a hap hazard fashion. I believe there is great opportunity for a company with a better designed code base to surpass Epic on a short time scale by making the development process more efficient through better modular code. Interestingly, Epic people like to spread the idea internally that they are really smart folks, but I think it is just propoganda to get people to stay there. I have worked with much more gifted, creative people elsewhere (but in a different field). First rate people can and will find a better job than working at Epic. I would have left much sooner but I had family oblications to stay in the Madison area.

1.0
Oct 31, 2009

Poorly managed

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Decent salary for recent college graduates. Decent benefits package. Lots of flexibility in work schedule. Company is respected in industry, although not nearly as much as Epic would like to think.

Cons

-Terrible management: poor ideas, reacts badly to criticism, and is dishonest to employees about company's performance and practices. They claim that this is a non-hierarchical company with an open exchange of ideas. That's only true in that promotions tend to not actually raise your salary; they just mean that you do less practical work in exchange for being a "team lead." The people who get promotions are often those that toe the company line and are most bubbly, not those who know what they are doing. Generally, the development teams are better-managed than the QA and writing teams. -Little opportunity for advancement; most promotions just move you to different areas of the company. The only new skills you learn tend to be how to use other Epic applications, so they only help further your career if you keep working at Epic. Even the production tools tend to be internally-developed, so they have no carry-over value with other companies. -Completely dishonest about working hours: you're paid to work 40 hours, but then are instructed that you're not doing your job if you aren't working 44+. -Tons of time wasted on self-congratulatory meetings and bonding exercises, even during busy times of year. -Company tends to spend more money on making its property look like a theme park than on paying employees. Lots of wasted space and frivolous features that cost the money more to maintain than it's worth.

2.0
Oct 30, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- The cafeteria food is cheap and tasty - Lots of young people (nice for interoffice dating, bad for getting work done) - Company is doing well despite the bad economy (though that's not so much because the executives are geniuses as because the government is shoveling taxpayer money into healthcare IT) - If you got a good GPA but made the mistake of majoring in some worthless soft subject like History or Psychology, this is probably the most money you're likely to make right out of school

Cons

- Middle managers are mostly hacks. There's a few good ones, but most of them seem like the kind of kids who got good grades in college by spending every Friday night in the library grinding through textbooks, overcompensating for a lack of self-confidence through sheer hours logged and OCD attention to detail. - Even if you get promoted to team lead by virtue of logging more hours than any of the other candidates, it will take nothing short of divine intervention for you to ever get promoted again; the upper echelons are for 10+ year veterans only. - You will see some gruesome displays of nerd couture at Epic. Greasy ponytails, wrinkled Star Wars t-shirts, neck beards, and socks-with-sandals are never far away, likewise lolcats and Penny Arcade cartoons taped to office windows. It reminds me of Cary Grant's line in His Girl Friday: "I thought it would be a novelty to have a face around here a man could look at without shuddering." - You didn't care about healthcare IT before you came to work here. Way to follow your dreams. - Upper management loves to brag about how well Epic is doing, but it's still a provincial little penny-ante outfit with revenues well below $1 billion and profits well below $100 million. It's a big player in a tiny little niche market (heavily dependent on government largesse), which come to think of it is a lot like how many of the employees think they're hotshots just because they got good grades at a middling public university in Ohio or Iowa. - They're big on the rah-rah brainwashing, so get ready to have some mass-produced kookiness shoved down your gullet.

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