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Epic Systems Employee Job Reviews in the United States

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15%
50%
29%
4%
1%
3.6
Average Rating
(based on 72 Epic Systems Review Ratings)

Ratings by Category

Company Culture
3.5
Growth Opportunities
2.9
People You Work With
4.0
Person You Work For
3.8
Rewards You Receive
3.8
Support You Get
3.3
Way You Work
3.8
Work Setting
4.1
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Epic Systems Employee

"Oldest of technologies, no intra-team interaction, no team outings, overall a very bad place to work at."

Person You Work For 3 / 5 People You Work With 1 / 5 Work Setting 3 / 5
Support You Get 1 / 5 Rewards You Receive 3 / 5 Growth Opportunities 2 / 5
Company Culture 3 / 5 Way You Work 1 / 5
Epic Systems Employee

"I've worked for Epic for almost two years. Co-workers are fantastic, company culture is very appealing and you work for the world's leader in two fast growing industries, healthcare and software. Definitely recommend it."

Person You Work For 5 / 5 People You Work With 5 / 5 Work Setting 5 / 5
Support You Get 5 / 5 Rewards You Receive 5 / 5 Growth Opportunities 5 / 5
Company Culture 5 / 5 Way You Work 5 / 5
Epic Systems Employee

"At Epic, you will work very long hours consistently in order to be considered a good employee. The team leads as a whole don't really care about you and are willing to have you fired over little things. To top it off, Epic will have you sign employment agreements (even after you've been working there for a while under threat of termination if you don't sign it) that seem to be sketchy at best. Your best bet would be to work for a different company that won't treat you like a hostage."

Person You Work For 1 / 5 People You Work With 5 / 5 Work Setting 2 / 5
Support You Get 1 / 5 Rewards You Receive 2 / 5 Growth Opportunities 1 / 5
Company Culture 4 / 5 Way You Work 4 / 5
Epic Systems Employee

"Good place to work but heavily dependent on which team/group/manager you are working with."

Person You Work For 5 / 5 People You Work With 4 / 5 Work Setting 3 / 5
Support You Get 4 / 5 Rewards You Receive 4 / 5 Growth Opportunities 2 / 5
Company Culture 4 / 5 Way You Work 4 / 5
Business Intelligence Developer

"I've worked with Epic systems since 2012, they are a strong company in the HIT space and certainly try to give you the large tech company feel while still maintaining a 'smaller' town feel. Epic employs nearly 7000 individuals with the majority working in the developer role."

Person You Work For 4 / 5 People You Work With 4 / 5 Work Setting 4 / 5
Support You Get 4 / 5 Rewards You Receive 5 / 5 Growth Opportunities 2 / 5
Company Culture 4 / 5 Way You Work 4 / 5
Epic Systems Employee

"Good company for new college grads."

Person You Work For 3 / 5 People You Work With 5 / 5 Work Setting 4 / 5
Support You Get 4 / 5 Rewards You Receive 4 / 5 Growth Opportunities 4 / 5
Company Culture 5 / 5 Way You Work 4 / 5
Epic Systems Employee

"The main problem I have is that you are doing about the same thing after 2 years as 4, additionally since they thrive on taking kids with relatively less attractive degrees (psychology, for example), they tend to underpay."

Person You Work For 5 / 5 People You Work With 5 / 5 Work Setting 5 / 5
Support You Get 5 / 5 Rewards You Receive 3 / 5 Growth Opportunities 3 / 5
Company Culture 5 / 5 Way You Work 5 / 5
Contract Attorney

"Great work environment. Laid back atmosphere and professional."

Person You Work For 4 / 5 People You Work With 4 / 5 Work Setting 4 / 5
Support You Get 4 / 5 Rewards You Receive 4 / 5 Growth Opportunities 4 / 5
Company Culture 4 / 5 Way You Work 5 / 5
Business Intelligence Developer

"I worked as a Business Intelligence Developer at Epic Systems Corporation for seven months. In that time, I would say that about 95% of my effort was directed toward training with no end to it in sight. Epic does not trust your education, and they would like to supplement it with a far more boring one. They show off a fantastic work campus, only to play bait-and-switch and stick you in a little white room with some books to look at for a year or more."

Person You Work For 2 / 5 People You Work With 1 / 5 Work Setting 4 / 5
Support You Get 4 / 5 Rewards You Receive 4 / 5 Growth Opportunities 1 / 5
Company Culture 2 / 5 Way You Work 3 / 5
Equipment Services Project Manager

"An Epic FAIL."

What do you like about working at Epic Systems?

"Nothing in particular about the company is pleasant."

Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?

"Don't even think about working for this company. It's a waste of your time."

What don't you like about working at Epic Systems?

"This company culls its employees regularly, which is a large part of the reason why there's such a high rate of hiring and a high turnover rate. They practice emotional blackmail to the highest degree, to oust those they don't find favorable to the company. One of the methods they use is to communicate en masse via texting to socially ostracize an individual. They will collectively proceed to cough, put their hands on their nose as if something is smelly, or spit, in order to isolate, humiliate, and degrade the targeted individual. Other times they will simply isolate the individual and prevent all communication for some time (for example, no email communication). The company also uses gossip to call out individuals in an indirect manner. After their harassment episode, employees are told to collectively sniffle, as if to feel sorry and weep for the individual being harassed. Additionally, your activities are constantly monitored, giving you a sense that you are being probed. Also, they will blacklist you with the help of local businesses, usually in the form of extreme passive aggressive behavior or rudeness. All of this is done in an indirect manner and employees are told to never admit that they are doing anything of this nature, fearing their own harassment or possible unemployment.These methods force one to quit and turn in one's two weeks notice. Otherwise, you'll get fired if you don't play along. At which point, they'll offer a measly two weeks severance agreement in exchange for no wrong doing by Epic. Epic's very open and collective harassment is embraced by management because they don't fear the consequences, assuming that the employee values resigning over the potentially detrimental firing that would be left on the employee's employment history. And, this is just in reference to the labor practice of Epic - this company should be investigated by the Justice department and other federal agencies for other illegal activities.Personally, I remember while recovering from my severe injury, I was in the office early in the morning before anyone else and leaving past 2 am everyday, just to catch up on my work - and I caught up, even on weekends (over 100 hours a week). My inexperienced application manager kept pushing me more and more, and it was difficult to work under her supervision. Eventually, I had a meeting with the HR director, and she asked me if I wanted a new application manager (in other words, to have my AM fired) as she was under-performing as a manager, but I said no. I mentioned this to some of my colleagues (perhaps I should have been more tact given the retaliation that would follow), and soon afterwards they investigated me for medical insurance fraud (why) and had my own healthcare providers involved. They also falsely accused me of drug addiction, drug dealing, and sexual misconduct / offense (by the same AM who I helped from being fired), and even harassed me at my own residence. They even had my colleagues connect to my laptop at the office to monitor me, which was uncomfortable to say the least. I was even told the obvious by an Epic employee that others had coordinated to treat me in this manner. They treated me as if I was only intelligent as cattle, and went so far as to set me up to test my IQ in an all day testing session analyzed by a PhD; yet, to their uninformed surprise, I literally scored a genius. What's also troublesome is that they tampered with my electronic medical records. When I asked about it, they asked me a variety of questions, then the following day they came up with a maintenance excuse that took months to fix. I also asked to see everything on my employee file and there was only basic information on there. Considering everything I've gone through, I found it odd as I wondered if there was something I didn't know. I sought counsel regarding this and I was told that this was very odd that only the basic information (e.g. reviews, all signed employee documents, etc.). was left on my employee file, which left no reason for my firing, and the possibility that they shredded or withheld documents from me was not to be excluded. On top of all of that, they gave me no raise or bonus after over an year of working at Epic, while new hires in training for the same position were making a higher salary than me.All of these actions were part of their concerted effort to get me to quit. One day, HR called me into their office and I was told to sign the severance agreement. I never signed their severance agreement stating that everything I experienced is discriminatory, I refused any amount of money they offered me in the severance, and I was fired. It is now close to an year since the day I was fired, and I believe I am still being harassed by Epic, primarily because they are afraid of a massive lawsuit against them. And, after applying to hundreds of jobs, experience working at Epic Systems Corporation doesn't seem to hold much weight on a resume as reputable non-healthcare companies don't seem to know Epic or care for those transferable managerial and IT skills, so you're left unemployed (and their one year non-compete agreements make it more difficult to find employment at healthcare firms). I'm unsure if Epic is actively preventing me from finding employment via a blacklist or by some other means, but they do enforce their non-competes with extreme prejudice. I am left worst off than before I started working at Epic, and I have a large employment gap with a bad reference. Effectively, I stand a better chance at succeeding with starting my own business, than to pass the initial screening process when applying to jobs. To this day, I hate it anytime I hear a cough, as I am reminded of Epic and the people who chose to harass and discriminate against me."

What suggestions do you have for management?

"Treat your employees well. Your labor practices will come back to bite you all."

Person You Work For 1 / 5 People You Work With 1 / 5 Work Setting 1 / 5
Support You Get 1 / 5 Rewards You Receive 1 / 5 Growth Opportunities 1 / 5
Company Culture 1 / 5 Way You Work 1 / 5
Software Developer Intern

What do you like about working at Epic Systems?

"I like the smart people, promising industry, good salary, beautiful campus, and quiet city."

Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?

"Do not judge this company if you have never worked here. There are too many rumors about Epic today, some of which are true but not all of them. The healthcare industry has a bright future, and Epic will too, if it can choose the right way to go."

What don't you like about working at Epic Systems?

"The basic software frame is too old because it is built with VB6. I hope Epic can use more 21-century technologies as soon as possible - cloud computing, mobile devices related techniques, and data mining. Epic needs some kind of revolution; it is kind of old for today, even if it still can make a lot of money with what it has now."

What suggestions do you have for management?

"Use new computer languages, technologies and conventions which are used by most of IT companies today, and respect software developers more because they are the core people of the company."

Person You Work For 4 / 5 People You Work With 4 / 5 Work Setting 4 / 5
Support You Get 2 / 5 Rewards You Receive 3 / 5 Growth Opportunities 3 / 5
Company Culture 4 / 5 Way You Work 4 / 5
Software Developer

"So far, so good."

What do you like about working at Epic Systems?

"I particularly like the people, the culture, and the campus of Epic."

Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?

"Confidence and good academic record are two things, I would say."

What don't you like about working at Epic Systems?

"The technologies Epic uses in their software do not appeal to me."

Person You Work For 3 / 5 People You Work With 3 / 5 Work Setting 3 / 5
Support You Get 3 / 5 Rewards You Receive 3 / 5 Growth Opportunities 3 / 5
Company Culture 3 / 5 Way You Work 3 / 5
QA Analyst

"Good coworkers. However, the upper management made some bad decisions."

What do you like about working at Epic Systems?

"I like the nice coworkers and work environment, and the good friendships by workers."

Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?

"Get the experience and move to a bigger company. It is a growing field with a promising future."

What don't you like about working at Epic Systems?

"I dislike bad agendas by the CEO and upper management, and working off-hours should be expected."

What suggestions do you have for management?

"Improve the work decisions and work ethics. They should encourage the work being done by production."

Person You Work For 3 / 5 People You Work With 4 / 5 Work Setting 5 / 5
Support You Get 4 / 5 Rewards You Receive 2 / 5 Growth Opportunities 2 / 5
Company Culture 1 / 5 Way You Work 5 / 5
Equipment Services Project Manager

What do you like about working at Epic Systems?

"I like the high responsibility and opportunity for self-direction. High stress and high hours are required to meet the needs of our customers, but we offer experience working with America's best healthcare organizations."

Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?

"Ask about the day-to-day - determine if you would like working on software day-to-day, or whether you are most interested in the product itself or in the installation process and time with customers."

What don't you like about working at Epic Systems?

"We are only asked to complete the work necessary. If a customer is very demanding, then we have to do a lot of work."

What suggestions do you have for management?

"Allow more travel time, and allow folks to work remotely more often, so that they can enjoy the benefits of spending a lot of time traveling."

Person You Work For 5 / 5 People You Work With 4 / 5 Work Setting 5 / 5
Support You Get 4 / 5 Rewards You Receive 4 / 5 Growth Opportunities 4 / 5
Company Culture 4 / 5 Way You Work 3 / 5
Software Developer

"Good people, great place, horrible work."

What do you like about working at Epic Systems?

"I am creating an impact by writing code for healthcare."

Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?

"Join only if you want money or like working for a healthcare IT firm, irrespective of how it works."

What don't you like about working at Epic Systems?

"I dislike older technologies, very less peer-to-peer interaction, and very less growth opportunities."

What suggestions do you have for management?

"Change the technology as soon as possible, and create more growth opportunities."

Person You Work For 3 / 5 People You Work With 3 / 5 Work Setting 4 / 5
Support You Get 4 / 5 Rewards You Receive 3 / 5 Growth Opportunities 1 / 5
Company Culture 2 / 5 Way You Work 1 / 5

Epic Systems Reviews FAQs

Is Epic Systems a good company to work for?

Epic Systems has an overall rating of 3.6 Average Rating out of 5, based on over 72 Epic Systems Review Ratings left anonymously by Epic Systems employees, which is 8% lower than the average rating for all companies on CareerBliss. 94% of employees would recommend working at Epic Systems.

Does Epic Systems pay their employees well?

Epic Systems employees earn $70,500 annually on average, or $34 per hour, which is 7% higher than the national salary average of $66,000 per year. 39 Epic Systems employees have shared their salaries on CareerBliss. Find Epic Systems Salaries by Job Title.

How satisfied are employees working at Epic Systems?

94% of employees would recommend working at Epic Systems with the overall rating of 3.6 out of 5. Employees also rated Epic Systems 3.5 out of 5 for Company Culture, 3.8 for Rewards You Receive, 2.9 for Growth Opportunities and 3.3 for support you get.

What is the highest paying job at Epic Systems?

According to our data, the highest paying job at Epic Systems is a Vice President at $251,000 annually. Browse Epic Systems Salaries by Job Profile.

What is the lowest paying job at Epic Systems?

According to our data, the lowest paying job at Epic Systems is a Technician at $16,000 annually. Browse Epic Systems Salaries by Job Profile.

What are the pros and cons of working at Epic Systems?

According to reviews on CareerBliss, employees commonly rated the pros of working at Epic Systems to be Company Culture, People You Work With, Person You Work For and Rewards You Receive, and cons to be Growth Opportunities.

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