Epic Software Developer reviews

3.3

48% would recommend to a friend

(962 total reviews)
avatar

Judith R. Faulkner

77% approve of CEO

82% positive business outlook

Software Developer employees have rated Epic with 3.3 out of 5 stars, based on 962 company reviews on Glassdoor. This indicates that most Software Developer professionals have a good working experience there. Epic is rated in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) by Software Developer professionals compared to other employers within the Tecnologia da informação industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

962 reviews
4.0
Mar 6, 2009
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

Great work environment. Decent benefits. Very competitive starting salary. Everybody is smart and young. Lots and lots of training. You learn a lot of good best practices. Processes are really though out quite a bit although putting stuff in practice takes a while.

Cons

It's a bit of closed, dogmatic environment. Since everybody is hired straight out of college, all management has been there forever. Management is very flat so advancement can be difficult. Leaving Epic can be tough. You can't work for customers or consultants for a year. Can't work with the competition for two years. I've seen lots of kids leave because they couldn't handle the pressure or because they weren't up to the very demanding levels Epic sets. It's pity that the best source of jobs, customers, is closed for a year.

2.0
Jan 29, 2009
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

Exposure to technology that is ever increasingly being used in health care. As such, it's a good launching pad for a related career in consulting or at a client site.

Cons

Long hours (think: you can bring pets into the office with you... WHEN you're spending your free time working on the weekends) Scattered management with no real structure, career advancement is only available for a select few. Management tries to paint the picture that it's such a fun and unique place to work, but you soon realize that it's just smoke and mirrors. They constantly remind you that you're "picked because you are among the brightest in their application pool", yet due to the number of apoplicants for each open positions, you are easily replaceable.

4.0
Jan 16, 2009
Recommend
Business Outlook

Pros

Great opportunity for anyone who is really smart, and capable of true responsibility. Folks in their mid twenties are routinely entrusted with keeping customers with $10M contracts happy. As you show that you can handle it, you acquire more responsibility. The boss calls it "earned autonomy." The company's software is routinely rated higher than all competitors by a neutral industry rating organization, and we win contracts with many more customers than our competitors (in our target market, which is health care organizations ranging in size from large to huge). There is very little bureaucracy or office politics. The company invests in people. Programmers have 3 months of training, other jobs a bit less. The work is worth doing. The software genuinely improves the quality of health care, which is a lot more rewarding than working on some accounting system would be. Epic is not a publicly traded company. So that whole set of pressures and competing priorities is entirely absent. All, or nearly all, of the management folks started as programmers. So management understands the work and concerns of the technical staff. Here are some turnover figures, computed in May 2008. - 16% of new hires leave within the first year - 31% of new hires leave within the first two years - 50% of new hires are still with the company after 4 years - 32% of new hires are still with the company after 10 years This represents a pretty low turnover rate. For national figures on turnover, see http://www.bls.gov/news.release/nlsoy.t02.htm. (Unfortunately, this table doesn't distinguish between professional jobs and burger-flipping.)

Cons

For programmers, the downside is that the software is pretty much special-purpose. You won't be able to check off a bunch of buzzwords on your resume because of your work at Epic. You won't get experience working with the hottest new technology. Some positions involve a huge amount of travel, and people can burn out after 2 to 4 years. All, or nearly all, of the management folks started as programmers. Their level of management skill varies widely.

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