Epic reviews

3.3

52% would recommend to a friend

(6,029 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 6,029 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
Nov 25, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good salary, willing to hire recent graduates, beautiful location and nice city, good cafeteria, rapidly growing company in a stable industry, decent benefits, and friendly co-workers.

Cons

My biggest complaint is that no one knows what they are doing. They have a training program but it is not very targeted: there is a culture at Epic that "everyone does everything". For a 30-year-old software product with millions of lines of code, that is obviously impossible. There are developers there for years who don't know develop for Clarity, a system for exporting the database to a SQL server, but are nevertheless expected to do so. This part of the culture needs to change; people should be allowed to specialize more. Another big problem is that their handling of employees feels a bit dishonest. For example, we are told that we fill out our TLG(time log) for billing purposes only. Clearly this is not true, since we are given hundreds of codes to use for non-billable activities. Rumor has it that TLGs are used as part of the decision-making process for raises and promotions, and this makes more sense. As another example of apparent dishonesty, I was told at an interview that Epic uses lots of different languages in programming, including things like C#. While it is true that a few of Epic's products use cutting-edge languages, those products are pretty small. Nearly all developers will be working with only Visual Basic 6.0 and an unknown language called Cache'. There is zero demand for either of these languages, so job experience at Epic basically doesn't count. Trying to leave it will be like trying to get hired as a college graduate. To be fair, at the time I left there was talk of migrating the client-side software to a more modern language. But this migration will take years, so only work with Epic if you are willing to work with languages that are not in demand anywhere else. Go-lives are nightmarish. With one single day of training, I was expected to be able to go on-site to a hospital and help doctors and nurses use their newly-installed software. I had no experience with the software I was helping them with, and little help from other Epic employees on-site. Epic presents this to its developers as a required learning experience, but the doctors and nurses there do not believe you are there to learn; they believe you are there to help them. The real reason Epic sends under-trained developers on Inpatient go-lives, I believe, is that they do not have enough properly trained people to meet their contractual obligations.

1.0
May 5, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Decent pay right out of college if you don't a degree that could get you a job anywhere else. Flexability of work environment is nice. Working with smart ppl who are young, which makes it a great place to meet friends if you are new to madison. Expect a 15-20% raise after your first year(anything else and your TL doesn't have much faith in you). $3000 first year christmas bonus is nice.

Cons

Epic is great at 2 things: #1 making money and #2 treating their customer right. If you are an implementor on a clinical application expect to work around 60 hours a week. The managment style with their Team Leads is truly broken. Productive employees are rarely given the correct compensation, when less productive employees move up based solely on their Team Lead. An employee's team lead rarely(most likely never) sees first hand in any way how productive an employee is. Everything is learned 3rd person from a very select few, where their evaluation process is extremely clouded. Also there is almost an aura of "never say anything bad about what Epic does or else." They attempt to be very open for suggestion to always be cutting edge and improving, but the truth is they only want suggestions to go from the top down. They do not treat employees well outside of the pay, they want you to work first and everything else in your life to come a distant second. After speaking with some senior managers(Implementation Managers) who are no longer team leads, they speak very poorly of the new team leads. As most new team leads are within a year or 2 out of school they egos begin to enlarge very quickly, which leads them to no longer attempt to improve.

1.0
Jul 2, 2024

Not good

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Technically good starting pay, good pay raise potential if you're a high performer. Amazing on campus food (pretty bad portion sizes though)

Cons

The place is a meat grinder, the harder you work the more they put on your plate, it is never enough. Work life balance is non-existent, the people who say you can say no are lying, I know because I tried. Working this job made me forget what it's like to live, I lived in fear of going to work every day and suffered from horrible depression, I could go on but the bottom line is this: if you don't get 100% of your satisfaction in life from you're job, you're going to have a bad time.

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