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
Jul 18, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

A good option to gain experience in the industry.

Cons

TL;dr: run away if you value feeling safe while working Epic makes employees sign a 12 month non-compete agreement when they start. Recently they renegotiated with several consulting groups to increase the period before hiring ex-Epics to 18 months, without mentioning this at all to employees. Amid a pandemic, their biggest concern is bringing 9800 employees back to one central campus. In order to accommodate this, they’ve been splitting those offices, that they tout as such a great perk, into two broom closets in which the door can barely swing open without hitting the chair. Imagine sitting in a cramped, windowless office for 10 hours each day, seeing the sun 20 minutes a day over the winter, all to stroke the ego of our out-of-touch 70 year old CEO. Schools in our area announced they will be 100% virtual through October, and the CEO emailed us the same day to tell us the plan to have everyone (even those at high risk to Covid) back by September is unchanged. Maybe she expects us to bring our kids with us into the office like she likes to talk about doing back in the day, all those years ago. Either way, the message is clear: we don’t care about you or your life outside of this job, and we’re willing to risk your health, physical and mental, for minimal productivity gains. As an employee of 10+ years, I’m horrified at what this company has become, and I’m looking for any opportunity to find something at a company where they can at least pretend they care about employees. Of course, the non-compete will make that more difficult. Thanks again, Epic.

3.0
Jun 25, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Decent pay for a starter job, good food, everyone gets an office (either your own or shared with 1 other person). Fun campus, comfortable physical environment and good amenities. Good insurance benefits. Meaningful, impactful work. And the Madison area is a good place to live despite the inflated housing market.

Cons

Upper management values productivity and profit over the health and safety of employees. Upper management does not respect employees or seriously consider their feedback. Recruiters lie about hours expectations; overtime work of at least a few hours every week is necessary and demanded. PTO benefits meets expectations but are not enough to make up for the extra hours required every week. The response to COVID has been abhorrent. They are requiring us to fully return to working from work with no evidence the pandemic is subsiding and no evidence that working from campus is any more beneficial to employees or the company than working from home, and they aren't even requiring masks. Perceived productivity is actively valued more highly than employee health and safety.

1.0
May 14, 2011
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- The salaries are good (but not worth what comes with it) - Benefits are excellent - They'll hire nearly any background - The food is great.

Cons

While they claim that total hours worked are not a factor in evaluations, it is very obvious that anybody working under "average" (a fluid and secret number) hours per week is unsatisfactory, and they will not hesitate to fire people. The idea that employees will have priorities away from work is a completely alien concept. Furthermore, the customer loads assigned to each employee are completely unreasonable. You will have multiple customers, they will each expect your undivided attention, and you will not be allowed to have any say in the relative priority of issues. If the customer says you have to do it, you have to. You won't be able to consider what other customers have going on when you discuss deadlines. Customers are asked to give "feedback" on their TS, and if management hears that issues aren't getting resolved fast enough, they will not hesitate to fire people. Management (Team leads, or "TLs") are promoted from within. Due to the enormous rate of turnover, they often have ~2 years of experience with the company when promoted, it's extremely hit or miss how skilled they turn out to be as managers. The company is openly hostile to the idea of bringing people in from the outside with management experience. This is, I believe, born from the days when the company was a small, tight group of people with shared responsibilities. While admirable, this ideal simply does not work on the scale that the company has grown, particularly given the degree of ruthlessness which they display in employee evaluation. It's one thing to take a casual attitude towards chain of command if it's understood that people will be evaluated in that context, but it just doesn't play out that way. They openly lie in the recruitment process. As recently as 6 months ago, potential TS were told they should expect to work 40-45 hours per week (I've heard that this recently jumped to 45-40, which is still not true). They claim flexible hours, which is not true. They emphasize the technical troubleshooting aspects of the TS job, but once hired they make a point of emphasizing that they expect TS to be outstanding in both technical and project management skills, but the latter is hardly discussed in the interview. Quite simply, there is an obvious directive from the top of the company that employees are disposable parts, and they employ shady recruiting tactics to keep up with the rate of growth. The lack of solid management means that there is virtually no recourse for unsatisfied employees, and no flexibility in letting people play to their strengths. In a small company, you can probably find those people, but not on the scale the company now is, particularly if you're not upfront about what you're looking for. It also doesn't help that the skills at the company aren't at all portable. Cache and VB6 are not in very high demand elsewhere.

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