Epic reviews

3.3

52% would recommend to a friend

(6,069 total reviews)
avatar

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 6,069 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
4.0
Oct 11, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

1) Meaningful work -- If you're the kind of person energized by doing socially valuable work, this is a good place. 2) High responsibility for low experience -- Very few companies will allow recent-college-graduates as much responsibility and advancement as fast as Epic will. After a year working here, I became a Team Lead and was running projects of upwards of 20 people. This can be a con too (see cons) but in terms of career development, Epic gave me fantastic skills in a short amount of time. 3) The standards for hiring at Epic are absurdly high. This means you'll be consistently working with extraordinarily smart people. Motivation levels vary, but in general those people are committed to their jobs and doing well at them. 4) It's always mentioned, but the food is fantastic. I miss the cafeteria so much. 5) Breadth of opportunities out there is great. One day, you might be presenting to 100 people, the next working with VBA Macros in Excel, the next testing a new database report. Epic stresses that 'your career is what you make it' and this is absolutely true for the company. 6) The Team Leads for QA are a really strong group with excellent leadership. 7) The culture here is a double-edged sword, (see hours, etc.), but in general is a really positive force on work experience. I felt proud to work for Epic, and do the work I was doing.

Cons

1) Philosophy is 'do your work, regardless of how much time it takes to do it.' This is fine by itself, as it allows for flexibility, but it results in unrealistic commitments to projects that cause long hours, even for the lower stress jobs. This causes burn out for a lot of folks who aren't able to manage their commitments. 2) Heavily process oriented with minimal room for innovative movement. As a large company, you won't find much opportunity to find creative process solutions. 3) Tools for projects + processes that are utilized are mostly internally developed. This means (for those who leave) a lack of experience using the standard tools of the trade. For example, in 2.5 years I never touched Microsoft Project, Visual Studio, Test Manager, HP Quality Center, Team Foundation Server, Selenium, QTP, or any of the other really common tools for QA. 4) Salaries (for QA) are not competitive once beyond 'entry level' experience. Starting Salary IS commensurate with the market, but because there are no pay-grade raises, even generous raises result in slow salary growth. Let me be clear: If you're just out of college, these salaries are competitive. If you excel at this job, however, you'll be making less than you should after a couple years.

4.0
Oct 3, 2013

Epic

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Got to make an iPad app from scratch in a team of four other interns. Made many of the major design decisions with some guidance

Cons

Some interaction with current employers, but mostly just with other interns

2.0
Oct 2, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

+Decent pay and great benefits, especially for those who are looking for a first job. +Meaningful work +Some of the best coworkers you can ask for! With very few exceptions, they're competent, hard-working, and willing to lend a hand when needed.

Cons

-Long hours. I was averaging 53 hours per week, and had put in a few 90 hour weeks during my time there. This is actually not uncommon on some teams. -Your success/opportunity for growth depends on luck to an extent. If you luck into a good app, a good Team Leader, and a good set of customers, you can easily thrive here and have lots of new opportunities. If not, you could be in for a rough life, long hours, and few opportunities. -Even small mistakes are not tolerated. Your job is in jeopardy if you make a mistake. I've seen people with a fairly long tenure (3+ years) get let go over seemingly minor mistakes. -They make it unnecessarily difficult to find any work in the industry after you leave. At first, it looks like it's just the non-compete, which doesn't seem unreasonable. Then, you come to find out about all of Epic's non-solicitation/non-hire agreements with some of the vendors they work with. Your best bet is to forget about healthcare entirely for at least one year after you leave.

Viewing 5626 - 5628 of 6,069 Reviews

Glassdoor has 6,345 Epic reviews submitted anonymously by Epic employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Epic is right for you.