Epic reviews

3.3

53% would recommend to a friend

(6,084 total reviews)
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Judith R. Faulkner

69% approve of CEO

76% positive business outlook

Epic has an employee rating of 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 6,084 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 Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

6K reviews
2.0
Mar 30, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Pay and benefits are excellent. If healthcare is your passion, you will also learn a ton about how the industry operates. Epic's reputation as a grind machine in the Madison area also means that former employees can find new jobs quickly, because they have proven they can work hard.

Cons

Management runs on "feedback", which means whatever your coworkers and occasionally customers (but usually your coworkers) say about you determines your growth in the company. Given that very few Epic employees had substantial careers anywhere else prior to Epic, and that the Epic burnout rate is high with employees rarely staying more than 5 years (or even 3), the feedback system has resulted in a management structure with very little diversity of thinking. Put simply, no one knows any better. So, you better tow the company line and kiss up. If a coworker is having a bad 18-hour work day and in their 1 year of work experience does not like an email you wrote, they might complain to your team lead, damaging your career as a consequence.

1.0
Mar 10, 2014

Soul-sucking.

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Interesting campus, fantastic food for cheap, VERY smart co-workers, software is incredible (if extremely complex); wildly successful corporation

Cons

Rarely is one's best work considered good enough. There is always fault to be found. Never before have I heard these phrases uttered so often: leadership by fear, viper pit, thrown under the bus, cover your ass, fly under the radar. The "Judy spotlight" is dreadful and should be avoided at all costs. I arrived at Epic with a ton of experience and high performance ratings. I worked hard. I was engaged and contributed. I succeed at several significant projects where my predecessors has struggled. I was one of the few people who could survive "Judy review" on the first pass. My family life suffered because I was working all the time. I left feeling like I was worthless.

2.0
Sep 11, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-You learn a lot and gain skills that are very valued in industry -Tons of autonomy (good if you know how to manage yourself and others) -Good raises and bonuses -Tons of responsibility thrust your way quickly. Definitely much more than my friends at some prestigious management consulting firms - You can specialize in what you want - Lots of direct exposure to C- Suite execs at billion dollar healthcare organizations. I was providing input in meetings with CIOs and CFOs when I was around 1 year of experience. - Hotel points and air miles

Cons

-Lots of young employees. Some are not high quality which can cause more experienced folks to work more to fill the gaps. I was there for about 3 years and was more experienced than 98% of the folks in my role and product (about 130+ people). -Difficult to get extra help on projects when work becomes too much. -Calls on cell phone during vacations and weekends are pretty consistent if you're good at what you are doing. I've spent 1-2 hours per day when on vacation calling into meetings. -No clear feedback system. You need to push people to give you feedback, even your supervisor -Some supervisors do not have strong people management skills. I had 1 review in about 3 years and rarely met with my supervisor. - Because there is so little oversight, there is a lack of consistent professionalism from other employees. Often you may need to pull folks aside (even senior level employees) and provide direct feedback to them. - Lots of good people are overworked which causes difficulty getting needed resource time from experts (unless you are friends with them :), which can cause a snowball effect on projects -Epic hires too many low quality employees and then fires many of them. They seem to use the first 6-9 months as the real interview process. This can cause headaches for the people working with the inexperienced folks. Some new hires are awesome though and provide value quickly. -Way too much travel if you are good. You'll end up making around 40-50 trips per year once you have some experience. This will include some weekend travel.

Viewing 445 - 447 of 6,084 Reviews

Glassdoor has 6,360 Epic reviews submitted anonymously by Epic employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Epic is right for you.