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
Nov 13, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-Campus themeing is crazily impressive. Really above and beyond like no other workplace. You need to see to believe. -I have my own office. No cubicles. -I worked hard my first couple years and absolutely feel I was rewarded for my effort. Offered significant leadership and managerial responsibilities. -Raises are annual and significantly above American averages. I make a lot of money on almost any scale, but especially as a single person in WI. -Health insurance is high quality and heavily subsidized by Epic. After 5 years it's free for me as a single person. Don't underestimate this perk. It's worth hundreds of dollars a month. -Sabbatical every 5 years is a cool program. 4 weeks paid vacation, plane tickets to another country, and a per diem while there. -I get to mix things up sometimes by participating in recruiting activities. Take folks out to dinner. Fly to career fairs. -No dress code -I've had the opportunity to work directly with our CEO Judy and other senior management and I'm happy to say they are universally passionate driven people who are truly making decisions based on what's best for patient care and our customers. They spent most of their lives building the company and money is not the primary concern. -Campus food is so good I've only left campus for lunch twice in 5+ years. -SD job where I get to travel. Sometimes even internationally. And Epic helps book personal vacation attached to those trips. -SD job where I get to sometimes be inside procedure rooms in hospitals and see firsthand some of the amazing work that's possible in medicine today. Never thought I'd be wearing scrubs in my career.

Cons

Almost everything is exceptional so stuff that's "just average" for the industry stands out. Right now I'd say that's: -the 3% 401k match. Fine but not special. -base vacation starts at 10 days and goes to 15 after 2 years. You get sick days and can take more days with unpaid leave(easy to get approved), plus sabbatical every 5 years is killer. But still, 5 years is a long wait. Vacation isn't a "con" really, it's just not above and beyond amazing. I'm giving us a 3/5 work life balance not because there's tons of pressure to work crazy hours. I know there's not on my team as a SD. You control your own destiny. But because it's the number one thing folks complain about in their day to day. We don't discourage working as much as you want so some people let it consume their lives. I really do believe that while crunch time can exist, it's mostly up to you how your work/life balance settles. Obviously you need to be happy living in Madison, WI and don't take a super heavy travel job like implementation if you're not ready for it. Those are givens.

3.0
Nov 11, 2019

7 years and counting

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

1. Good food: seriously chef's at Epic are great and this is motivation to go to work for lots of people. 2. Beautiful campus: Campus is huge and extremely pretty 3. Company culture is good. Hearing CEO every month in staff meeting is very motivating and inspirational.

Cons

1. Diversity in managers is just unbelievable: some managers are decedents of Hitler- this has not happened with me but I have seen extremely rude behavior from few managers and product leads in meetings. On the other hand I have seen managers who are too chilled out and have absolutely no opinion, which means other managers in same team rank their team members to their liking. 2. Rankings are more comparative to your peers. There is set number of people who can be at certain rank, which means if there are lots of people of same caliber on the same team some of them will end up bumped down in ranks. Ranks determine raises and bonuses. This also means that if your team has few people who work 60+hrs/week and have absolutely no life than you are doomed because you will be compared to those people and your TL will often give their examples even if they are not better and are only getting done more just because of hours. 3. Lots of people get opportunity to become mangers early and unfortunate thing about that is young out of college graduates don't often know how to deal with experienced team members. 4. Your TL really plays big role in your career here at Epic. Epic is all about doing the right thing and if ever while doing so you crossed path of some hot head TL and your TL isn't strong enough to back you then it will be you who will suffer entirely. 5. There is peer feedback system where you can submit feedback to someone's TL. I have mostly submitted positive feedback because that is something you hear less here at Epic but twice when I submitted mediocre feedback it back fired. TLs are supposed to take that feedback verify it and tell it to their team members anonymously but both the peers who I submitted mediocre feedback for just submitted poor feedback for some random reasons for me in next 6 monyhs because their TLs were not discreet enough. Yeah, so lot of immature people who are trying to take revenge instead of improving on it. 6. Epic has new quarterly releases and many teams think that they have adapted to it but they really have not. Developers are the one who end up suffering the most. Project planning starts way too late and QA are given extremely generous amount of time to test leaving minimal time for design, dev and code review. Development is core of Epic but quarterly release has turned it the other way now. Due to extremely tight timelines quality of dev is not as good and more issues are found during code review and quality assurance which ends up adding up more overhead and time. 7. Web transition has taken a toll on devs and more devs just end up working on web transition and making things prettier instead of innovative things. I definitely remember good old days where I used to work on innovative projects back to back. 7. Learning actually has been all time low. When I started there were so many sessions available and time to actually attend them. Now, learning is very trimmed down (shark weeks have turned in shark day to shark half day) and most of the time attending them means I am staying late to finish my work. 8. Stock option is awful. I have to pay out of my pocket to obtain the bonus % shares. People coming out of college are just paying loans, people done with college loan are getting houses and paying loans for that and you want them to take another loan to buy shares to get the bonus %? Because of all these cons I would not recommend any of my friends to apply here anymore.

1.0
Nov 11, 2019

Epic is not epic

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The cafeterias has good food, and the building design is cool. Relaxed dress code.

Cons

1. They overwork employees. Many people, including myself, were overworked, and as a result 8-9 hr days were extremely rare. It seemed like the higher position you had the less likely you were to be working long hours. 2. Not many experienced developers. Many of the people at Epic are young (0-3 years experience) and do not have good experience planning out projects step by step. As a first time developer I had no experience in planning a project. I had very little instruction on creation of the tickets and no one who pointed this out. 3. You will need to be able to stand up for all of "your" decisions. Even if you did not make them. 4. Epic uses old languages. Some languages that they use are MUMPs and VB. 5. They expect the developer to be the UI designer. On the project I worked on, my front end went through more than three large ui changes after it had already been approved and created. 6. They say they are open about the internal changes of the company, but when I was there they changed some of the rules and only told us about the ones people would like at the all Epic meeting. Looking back now I can remember multiple times this kind of thing happened. 7. You will need to be able to estimate the amount of time a project will take. Without experience this is very difficult. 8. You must move to Wisconsin. This may not be a problem for some people, but as someone from the south, the winters felt really long and the days were short.

Viewing 691 - 693 of 953 Reviews

Glassdoor has 6,316 Epic reviews submitted anonymously by Epic employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Epic is right for you.