Epic reviews

3.3

52% would recommend to a friend

(6,028 total reviews)
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Judith R. Faulkner

69% approve of CEO

74% positive business outlook

Epic has an employee rating of 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 6,028 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
2.0
Dec 11, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-Good salary, especially for more unique majors -Gain PM experience, although as an application coordinator (first ~1 year) you do a lot of very niche Epic build and note-taking -I have a good TL (boss) and AMs (basically my manager on each project). I also like my team and find most people agreeable and easy to work with. -Mentor/mentee program is cool -Culinary -Relatively flexible schedule (easy to step out for doctor's appointments) -It seems like recently they've begun to make some changes in response to mass departures and negative feedback

Cons

-Factor in long hours for salary (expectation is at least 45 hours a week, and if you don't log more, you're not seen as a high performer). Travel and go-lives make 45 hours difficult to maintain. -Keep in mind some positive reviews are solicited by upper management (unlikely employees would decline the request or share a negative review in that case) -Staffed to two escalated and stressful customers my first month, expected to dive in and handle it with no training. The overwhelm in the first few months is universal for IS. Little concern for mental health that isn't performative. -Lack of diversity and effort to diversify. Uses the relative whiteness of Wisconsin as an excuse for poor hiring policies ("meritocracy"). I don't know anyone with a disability who works here. For short-term issues, they tend to push for unpaid FMLA rather than offering accommodations. -Company culture seems strange, but I have no basis for comparison. Feedback mandatory can lead to challenging work relationships since feedback is formally submitted and impacts a person's raise. I open about what I was struggling with my Team Lead but it led to no change. Few people last longer than one year in IS. -Extensive two-year non-compete, recently expanded. -No WFH, self-serving interpretation of county Covid policies. Gaslighting employees who don't feel comfortable returning in person (for reasons like kids, disability, etc). I've been satisfied with past jobs and have worked hard throughout college (like most IS). I'm sharing this so that potential employees know what they're getting into. They'll make you feel very smart and special but it's not that hard to get a job here if you meet their criteria, especially now that they're having staffing issues. If you can find something else, take it.

2.0
Jul 19, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-Salary is decent for an entry-level position -Health Insurance is virtually unmatched -Other employers are impressed by your past work experience. A job at Epic is evidence that you can work hard and pick up new skills quickly. -You will quickly learn very important and highly transferable business skills such as: (1) project management, (2) delegation, (3) how to hold effective meetings, (4) how to work on a team, (5) organization/time management skills

Cons

-Stress -Limited PTO -Manipulative and unhealthy corporate culture -Everyone is so overworked that teams constantly play hot-potato with responsibility and process-ownership In his book "The Design of Everyday Things," Don Norman provides numerous compelling examples of the unhealthy and fallacious instinct to blame humans rather than processes for any given failure. The point that emerges from his extensive discussion is that failures do not usually happen because individuals are lazy or incompetent. Rather, failures inevitably happen because of unreasonable work conditions. In other words, failures typically are symptoms of SYSTEMIC problems rather than the unpreventable result of natural variations between employees. Even those among us with the strongest work ethic or the highest expertise are disposed to failure when they become overworked. Despite this book being on Epic's internal recommended reading list, the company seems incapable of taking its message to heart. Epic is unrelentingly in its fine-tuning the efficiency of its production, maximizing the labor while minimizing the laborers (as a general policy, it will only consider hiring additional team members if the average number of weekly hours per team member is greater than 50 AND the team is still unable to accomplish its most essential tasks). Failures to deliver on deadlines is invariably treated as a personal problem, rather than a failure of the processes. If the failure of any arbitrary part in a factory could cause the overall failure of the entire factory's production, then we might consider that to be a badly designed factory. Similarly (though obviously not in every respect, as humans are not robot-arms), a team/house/app/etc. in which every single individual is simultaneously a bottleneck is a recipe for disaster. But when disaster strikes, as it inevitably does, it is *your* failure to manage time or prioritize tasks or escalate problems correctly, rather than problems that should be expected given the nature of the processes that govern our workdays. My disillusionment with this company is completed by its COVID-19 response. The COVID-19 policies are decided by a secret Illuminati of executives, with zero accountability or direct interaction with those who are affected by their decisions; while our feedback is officially encouraged, the role that that feedback actually plays in the legislation of policy is deeply mysterious and opaque. The general impression is that Epic has decided the facts for itself: apparently its "culture of collaboration" is more important than the health, safety, and well-being of its employees, our families, and the heath of the broader public. While disagreement was tolerated at first, now it is silenced for the official reason that it is no longer "productive." My best guess as to the actual reason is that it is bad for morale and is actively harmful to their ability to hire and maintain new robot-arms. Unfortunately, Epic is just another business, and the superficially virtuous motive of saving lives is consistently leveraged as the ultimate way to guilt its employees into unreasonable workloads, maximizing productivity while minimizing costs.

2.0
Jul 7, 2020

Bad work life balance

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

You own your projects from start to finish.

Cons

Bad work life balance. They expect at least 45 hours a week.

Viewing 184 - 186 of 6,028 Reviews

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