Epic reviews

3.3

52% would recommend to a friend

(6,032 total reviews)
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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 6,032 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
Jun 26, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Work: My coworkers are intelligent, resourceful, hard-working teammates. Our software helps so many organizations and saves lives. Our benefits are good: The cafeteria is amazing and sells meals at a discount. Salaries are high for the Midwest. Healthcare coverage is very strong. It's excellent that we get a one-month sabbatical every 5 years, but there's a downside to that.

Cons

Anti-employee stance: Epic pretends to care about you while you're employed, but quickly turns against you. Employees have a 1-2 year noncompete agreement, which means if you leave, you better have savings. Epic has hurt employees' rights nationwide (Epic v. Lewis). Leadership: Upper management is secretive and authoritarian. I used to think we cared about patients and employees, but management is being unreasonable with regards to the COVID pandemic. They have outlined a plan to go back to work too soon, endangering lives. They're not listening to our concerns. They are filtering the feedback and questions to make it seem like people have a positive outlook on returning to work. Work: Our codebase is unmaintainable. We don't put in time to develop safeguards to make harder to develop mistakes in our code. We keep marching ahead with new functionality, but we don't spend the time fixing existing features or consolidating modules. There are hundreds of bugs notes that are over 5 years old. Benefits: While we have some excellent benefits, time off is pretty skimpy. Your first 2 years, you get 10 days of vacation per year. After that, it stays at 15 days with no chance of getting any higher with tenure. We get the bare minimum number of holidays, totaling 6.5 days plus 1 floating holiday. (To give you a sense of this, you'd use the floating day to take the Friday after Thanksgiving off.) Growth: There could be great career growth or you may feel stuck in a rut. For technical and implementation services, you will likely stay in healthcare IT. However, the noncompete severely limits you.

2.0
Jun 23, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Meaningful work Ok place to work if you're planning on staying in the area for a long time

Cons

Management promotes feedback but doesn't take feedback themselves Tight deadlines and high stress Have to go through extensive process for every development Have to deal with old outdated software No focus on innovation - migrating to the web is considered new Middle of nowhere Lack of diversity Limited vacation days Hierarchical structure Creepy emphasis on culture

1.0
Mar 12, 2020

Coronavirus

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Good food, good people.

Cons

The hiring process, based on my perspective, made me have expectations that weren't reality. They kept the description and processes of the job vague, leaving to my imagination of what I was going to do daily. The recruiter told me I would have first grabs for Healthy Planet, when I interviewed in September. But I ended up on Ambulatory, where other people who interviewed after me got Healthy Planet. I think the biggest misleading moment was when Epic suggested I could do work relating to my major. There was some development you could do, but that is about it. I think you should be more clear what the job description is. There are plenty of people who would be attracted to this job, even if you did not try to gloss over the details. Ambulatory is such a huge app, that any TS assigned here is going to own so much that it won't be sustainable. I would strongly consider hiring more TS into this app, and to other apps in general. Even if this means lowering wages, that way TS would can focus their energies towards customers more productively, and have a better work life balance. Training could be more robust in customer service. Perhaps Epic could make it a requirement to complete the customer section of TS Skills (ITaP, Escalations, etc.) before you're assigned a customer. That way new hires could have a sense of what customer work would look like. I came in having no idea how what customer work was, which made me already disadvantageous in this situation. Another option would be to have a "mock customer" where you can practice going through issues for a week, although this would require time and effort. Throwing new hires to all these complex issues with no foundation is only a path to failure. The fact I am advising analysts, who definitely know more than me also seems alarming. There is a high turnover for short tenured people, especially among IS. I know several people in IS who cry about being overworked, working day and night in airports/hotel, just to go to back to the office and do it again. I can only imagine that other roles such as, TS, RD, etc. are also overworked and are unhappy. I think Epic likes to emphasize that we're "smart" and that we have a lower admission rate than Harvard. And you keep pushing the Flint water crisis with every chance you get. It is incredibly patronizing and facilitates a "I'm better" attitude. The staff meetings just seems like propaganda to me at this point. Please acknowledge that there are problems that Epic needs to fix. I'm no computer scientist, but I can recognize that the code is super inefficient and difficult to interpret at times. That isn't always RD's fault. What can be done very easily in modern languages are almost impossible to do using M. I don't understand why Epic continues to use outdated programming languages other than for convenience. Code that's "good enough" shouldn't cut it, especially since we're responsible for patients' lives. Seems like there is an Escalation every month. I really hope when Epic moves to web, things like this will only be in the past. Also what is the deal with work from home? Personally I would rather work at an office, but limiting flexibility seems like helicopter parenting. It is okay to advertise. Stop lying that Epic doesn't. You can see ads at airports. The local radio here says they are sponsored by Epic. The straw that broke the camel's back is this whole Coronavirus debacle. Epic still let IS travel to hot zones and force them to come back, without changing and policy to combat it effectively. Every major company change their work from policy. Except Epic. Why? Because they don't care. They just want to make money. There is a reason why people leave Epic early in their careers. If you want to have more long term employees, please take any feedback more seriously.

Viewing 112 - 114 of 6,032 Reviews

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