Epic Software Developer reviews

3.3

49% would recommend to a friend

(953 total reviews)
avatar

Judith R. Faulkner

75% approve of CEO

81% positive business outlook

Software Engineer/Developer employees have rated Epic with 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 953 company reviews on Glassdoor. This indicates that most Software Engineer/Developer professionals have a good working experience there. Epic is rated in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) by Software Engineer/Developer professionals compared to other employers within the Informationstechnologie industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

953 reviews
5.0
Dec 16, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Epic's culture encourages ownership and the huge customer base gives developers many opportunities to have a big impact on healthcare. Because the company is privately held and led by developers, decisions are made for the long-term instead of for a quarterly stock market valuation. Executive leadership has the will to make hard decisions and stick with them. Developers have a lot of independence on design and implementation of projects. I've never been given a spec to go code - I've always just been given a problem and asked to solve it or a high level workflow idea to investigate. Almost all developers do full stack, and you're involved with the full life cycle of projects. You'll talk to customers, write the designs, create the UI mockups (with UXD help), implement the design, and help users during go-live or at post-live visits. You'll see your code in action while patients are receiving care. I've never been discouraged from pursuing a good idea I came up with myself. I might have other work I need to do (e.g. customer commitments, bug fixes, etc), but if I'm willing to put in the time to get the development done, we'll find a way to get it reviewed and released. These "extra time" projects are some of the things I'm most proud of. Product teams have gotten fairly large as Epic's grown, but individual scrum groups or functional area teams have stayed small so that you know the people you work with pretty well.

Cons

With quarterly releases the time from QA complete to in production for enhancements is much faster than it used to be, but I still wish the feedback loop was shorter. Healthcare providers are naturally risk-averse (for good reason), but I'd love to get to a place where we could get new features to production environments faster.

5.0
Dec 6, 2019

I'm really glad to be working here

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Epic truly tries to do the right thing for its customers, even if it's costly to Epic. There really are more important things to Epic than making as much money as it can. Epic's sense of whimsy and fun sets it apart from other places I've worked. Epic has a sense of humor: it shines in its choice of art, its decoration, and its large group events. It is a very rare experience for me to be in a meeting and be thinking that the meeting is a waste of time. Occasionally I think I don't need to be present, but the meeting itself is worthwhile.

Cons

Especially for technical services (TS), I think Epic could do a better of job of trying to keep them happy and retain their services. TS is a difficult job and it takes a specific kind of person to do it well over a long period of time.

4.0
Nov 22, 2019

Challenging and Rewarding

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I love the mission. As a software developer, I've been able to work on projects that help doctors and nurses who care for my friends and family across the US. That feels good. The work itself is mentally challenging. I've designed and coded projects on multiple platforms, each with different quirks and ways of doing things. Most of my work has been in Cache, SQL, and Python, but also exposure to lots of other areas. Some projects have been in completely new areas, others needed to integrate into a very established code base. Never boring, always learning. I like how Epic has developers also lead the design process. I lead the design process for projects that I'm also the lead developer for. That means I get to devote time to learning about a given domain and designing my project, and I know I'm personally on the hook for whatever I proposed in the design. There's a nice balance between heads down coding and research/design. The benefits are great, especially once you hit the 5 year mark. Epic does a great job hiring fast thinkers. I'm a "boomerang" (I left Epic and later returned). I didn't fully appreciate the speed and efficiency of the "normal" Epic staff member until I left. It's a great place to work with really intelligent co-workers who positively challenge each other to continually grow.

Cons

My complaints would only be solved by going into business for myself and being my own boss. I have no intention of doing that. No option to work from home for part of each week. I could be just as efficient (or more efficient) working from home, meeting-free, for 1 or 2 days each week. Some of our processes can be tedious or annoying. Some individuals can be hard to work with. But those are normal at any profession, in any job, unless you work for yourself. For me, the Pros far outweigh the Cons.

Viewing 688 - 690 of 953 Reviews

Glassdoor has 6,317 Epic reviews submitted anonymously by Epic employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Epic is right for you.