Epic Software Developer reviews

3.4

51% would recommend to a friend

(951 total reviews)
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Judith R. Faulkner

75% approve of CEO

80% positive business outlook

Software Engineer/Developer employees have rated Epic with 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 951 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

951 reviews
4.0
Aug 11, 2012
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Epic's product are awesome and they are better then their competitors by a mile (though some are catching up).. It dominates competition in almost all respects (which is rare in a customer centric market) - Epic has an amazing work culture (customers who buy Epic are getting value for their money. Folks who join fresh out a college have a great chance of understanding how success comes about - hard work and focus. - The campus is nice and almost a tourist attraction in its own right, though full time folks have nary an opportunity to enjoy it.. - Every employees gets a room (though again growth means some folks share) and believe me sometimes it makes a difference.

Cons

Let me preface this by saying that I work hard and am okay with giving 80 hours a week. In fact my advice to folks who are applying to Epic, its not just a software company, its software and services company (almost akin to consulting) and expect to put in long hours. Stop whining about work/life balance - it gets made not given. and realize that working at a company is about fitting with a culture (i.e. a give and take). - Epic is made to an effect in its founder's image. There are things Judy believes and hence Epic does. But as the company grows its not adapting. So if you clash with "Epic's" ideals it will be difficult for you. - There is a weird dichotomy in that we try to be open and transparent to customer as much as possible but the management decided to not do the same for its employees. It almost smacks of patronizing attitude towards employees. For example the fact that we do stackranking was news to most when it came out in the blogs. Feedback from the lead is always "tangential" and there is always a perception among employees about higher-than-average firings (and the management seems to not do much about this perception). - A lot of your career advance is strongly linked to the types of projects you work on. Infrastructure projects are not visible and high impact and essentially you will end up wasting a whole release unless you take up projects on your own.(this is more for software devs though) - While I was leaving we were trying to hire more to software devs to compensate for growth and were not doing a very good job of it. Essentially we seemed to be throwing more money at the problem without trying to address the systemic issues. Full disclosure I left because I wanted to work on something other than Epic's stuff.

3.0
Aug 6, 2012

It is OK

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

beautiful campus, good work environment, good pay (for fresh masters).

Cons

old programming language, bad architecture. dirty code

2.0
Aug 5, 2012
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Nice campus, cheap and good food, "use your best judgement" attitude (e.g. they ask you to use your judgement when spending on Epic paid dinners instead of setting a limit) It is a great place to work if you have a good TL. Coworkers are generally intelligent and enthusiastic except for a few QAers who can be pretty dumb and irritating. There is constant feedback, which might be bad since feedback can come from anyone and goes to your TL directly. Good work is appreciated, mostly. If you know how to say NO politely, you will be fine. If you can learn to take short breaks at work to enjoy the weather and the campus and leave your work at 5-ish and not bother about it at home, it will be a great place to work.

Cons

Though the pay is excellent when you join, the raise is slow . The yearly bonus is meager and is performance based and solely depends on your TL and his TL. So what it means is that, to get a good yearly raise and bonus you will have to work your ass off, at least if others in your team are doing so. There is no transparency in performance review. No one knows what you are rated on unless you are sneaky enough to find the review template in the shared folders. And you will be evaluated every second. They also fire a lot, so it's not a peaceful job for everyone. The expectations are high. There is no proper process for design and the deadlines are hard to reach. There are like a half dozen deadlines every month and 2 to 3 days of bug bash nights prior to these deadlines. You work till 9 or 10 and you get a stinky meal for that, while you should be enjoying your favorite show on TV or time with your wife and kids. If you can't say NO politely, you will end up buried in the huge pile of work that never seems to shrink or stop. If you can say NO and crack a joke, then you will be fine. You will always find your epic friends complain about work and their TLs. Lot of stupid policies and HR never replies to your emails. You have a HR assigned to you when recruiting but you never meet him/her after you join until you are quitting or fired. Most of the development policies of the company are misunderstood by the higher level developers/TLs and they follow them blindly and sometimes are not open to new ideas because of this. They promise fixes and enhancements to customers and then push the lower level developers to work overtime to get things done without any incentive. They keep pushing you saying "But we promised the customers, it is high priority and you should get it done" as if customers are going to kill you if you miss your deadline. Though they end up taking some years to solve certain customers problems. Work in unpredictable and there is no set development cycle. It changes every year, so you can't make any travel plans way ahead (I mean, you can travel during peak times if you notify early enough, but when you come back from travel, god knows how much more you have to work) A lot of developers do not get time to enjoy the campus though you are drawn to the company by it when you join. A lot of people eat at their desk, not just to go home early, but to work during that time and all the team members are independent individuals who cannot adjust their schedules to eat together. And of course the meetings at 12 so you can enjoy your lunch with a whole bunch of people talking about work. A lot of bug fixes and sometimes bug enhancements are retrofit back to older versions, which sucks from a developer standpoint, because they are doing the same thing, writing the exact same code and documentation and going through a long tedious development process. You are given ownership of modules and if anything goes wrong with your module, you take the responsibility and fix it, which is good. But there is no one to get help from, if you are not able to fix it. I guess this page is not enough to write about the company.

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