Epic reviews

3.3

52% would recommend to a friend

(6,029 total reviews)
avatar

Judith R. Faulkner

69% approve of CEO

75% 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 Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

6K reviews
2.0
Aug 9, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good pay and intelligent co-workers.

Cons

I've worked at Epic for over 5 years and have always had complaints about the company, but was willing to look past them until management's COVID-19 response. Overwork is something that's always been a problem, if you work here you will be given the workload of at least two employees and will have a task list that grows each day. This has become especially bad lately as sales and application growth continued but hiring flattened off, seemingly due to a desire to keep the company under 10,000 employees, regardless of the needs of the business. Additionally the handling of the pandemic and lack of flexible choices given to many have lead to tenured employees leaving or taking leaves of absence, further overloading already stressed employees. Often long hours, working weekends and late night emails are touted by those in management positions as examples of their dedication and you'll be automatically flagged if you work under 45 hours. Recovery time is given at a rate of 2-3 days worked to 1 off. So if you work 60-70 hours one week you'll be lucky to get one day off, and the culture and processes will subtly shame you for taking that time. Many benefits at Epic follow this pattern, either being behind so many qualifiers or subtle hints that you should "feel bad about using it" that they only exist so Epic can say they have xyz benefits, but in reality they're basically unusable. In a customer facing role you will be pressured to sacrifice your free time and mental health to go constantly above and beyond or to make up for the lack of staff, but you will get nothing of the sort in return from the company if you need assistance. Epic touts that they care about their employees but their actions are directly contradictory of that. Epic was extremely slow to allow remote work at the start of the Coronavirus pandemic, and when they finally did allow it, it came with not very subtle shaming that "leaders" were needed on campus, directly implying that if you chose to protect the safety of yourself and those around you by working from home, you were a bad employee. During this time petitions circulated to facilitate WFH and stop travel, and they were ignored by management until they got large enough and were then deleted. This pattern continued with multiple forms of feedback and employee communication being shut down and any sort of discussion silenced, culminating in multiple mid-level managers being demoted for speaking up against the return to work plan. Of course workplaces aren't a democracy, but this is especially upsetting as this whole time Epic has touted their culture of openness and feedback while taking actions directly opposite of that. They claim they're making a data driven approach to bringing people back, but have shown us no data that indicates quality or productivity is slipping during WFH. They claim they're working closely with local officials to ensure the plan is safe while looking for every loophole possible in public health orders to bring us back as soon as possible. They claim employee health is their top priority but have made high risk employees go through lengthy and demeaning processes just to be able to work from home for a few more weeks. Beyond the loss of trust and respect towards management from employees, it's ridiculous how much of this fiasco could have been prevented with a simple policy of "WFH until the end of the year, when we'll re-evaluate". Instead we've had the high salaried management group working for months putting out fires related to this, employees scrambling to make childcare plans due to late night weekend emails changing policy, millions of dollars spent splitting offices in half that no one will want to work in and now the company's reputation has been dragged through the mud in the national news. Ironically, the culture that management espouses in their WFW plan has become tainted and soured by their very actions to save it.

2.0
Jul 6, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

good salary, stock options and underground parking

Cons

- they try to control all aspects of your life - 'the epic way' is almost cult-like - the mantra of 'customer first' is used to justify grinding people up and spitting them out - they don't support families with Children They don't support anything that exists outside the circle of 'your epic family'

1.0
Feb 10, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

1. Food at Epic is the best part. The culinary team is awesome, and the meals are extremely affordable. I looked forward to eating lunch every single day. 2. Epic has some really talented and intelligent employees. You get the opportunity to work with some really great people and big projects early on. 3. The campus is amazing. Not many employers can match the Epic campus.

Cons

Epic does a good job making you feel awful about yourself and that you're not good enough. Don't let them gaslight you and know that this company, its leadership, and its policies are not normal. Get what you can and get out. 1. Feedback and management. Any constructive feedback you receive hurts you severely. Your negative feedback will haunt you for your entire career. Regardless of its validity, your manager (team lead) is likely to side with whoever put in the feedback. Nobody has your back at this company, so watch out. The only way to escape poor feedback at Epic and continue growing in your career is to switch teams (apps) or leave the company. 2. Diversity or a lack thereof. Epic is a very white company. They have D&I efforts, but there's obviously a major culture issue when almost all of your tenured employees and leadership team is white. You can't become more diverse through hiring alone. Epic makes no effort to maintain minority candidates, develop them, or put them in positions to succeed. If you fit the Epic mold, you have a bright future. 3. Epic offers no work from home policy. With a high travel role, a majority of your meetings are conducted over the phone. Yet, Epic refuses to offer employees an option to work from home, because they don't trust you to be productive. Why do you force us to take over half our meetings over WebEx with someone across campus or in another city, but refuse to let us work from home? They dangle the option to go Boost (remote consulting) or work remotely on a temporary contract basis if you stick around long enough. Unfortunately, you take a significant pay cut and lose several benefits with this route. This option is also reserved for employees who have aligned themselves favorably with managers. Your contract length and perks vary greatly depending on how much they value you. 4. Staff meeting is a monthly meeting where they pack 10,000 people into an auditorium for 3 hours so that Judy can condescendingly tell you how to write emails and schedule meetings. Don't be surprised if you hear any borderline racist comments on stage. It's a complete waste of time but absolutely mandatory, unless you have a medical emergency. 5. Work-life balance, pay, and raises. Be prepared to work at least 45+ hr/wk. It's not uncommon to work 50, 60, 70+ hours a week consistently. Epic works you to the bone until you're burnt out and hires another 22 year old fresh out of school to take your place. At Epic, you are just another cog in the machine. They talk about how big the raises and bonsus are, but know that you start underpaid. If you consider how many hours you're working and all the awful policies you put up with, no amount of money Epic offers you is worth your health, happiness and wellbeing. 6. Epic's non-compete is bad for their employees, bad for their customers, and bad for the industry. After someone leaves Epic, they can't work for a consulting company for at least 2 years and for a customer for at least 1 year from their departure date. Epic wants to decrease competition within the industry and the diminish talent pool available so that their customers are reliant on their overpriced services and help. 7. PTO is awful. 10 days a year is archaic, especially with how many hours you're putting in week after week. 8. Travel policies. The travel team has extremely strict policies. You have no flexibility around your flight times, airline preferences, and hotel options. This means a lot of delayed flights and late nights flying back to to Madison.

Viewing 67 - 69 of 6,029 Reviews

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