An Economy for the 21st Century
The past few years almost all of my writing has focused on documenting the rise of Dane County’s technology industry. This cover story for Isthmus begins:
This is the big question: How far can Dane County ride Epic’s success?
Done right, we’re talking about the foundation for Dane County’s 21st-century economy being built on the medical software industry: lots of good-paying information technology jobs that fuel an expanding housing market, a glittering downtown with hip restaurants and music clubs, a rising tax base to fund new community services and a lot more resources to deal with the serious problems of poverty.
Call it the “Epiconomy.” Madison advertising executive Andy Wallman, who coined the name, should trademark it. “Epiconomy” nails the fact that Epic now drives the Madison area’s prosperity.
Founded in 1979 by its mastermind Judith Faulkner, Epic Systems Corp.is the world leader in the burgeoning health-care software market. The privately owned Epic has 6,800 employees at its Disney-like headquarters in Verona and recorded $1.66 billion in sales in 2013. The company is renowned — notorious, say its critics — for hiring only the smartest young people and working them hard. Salaries for these twentysomethings range from an estimated $60,000 to $100,000 a year.
More are coming. Lots more.
“They could have as many as 10,000 employees by 2018,” says Madison planning chief Steven Cover, who was among top city officials briefed by Epic’s chief administrative officer Steve Dickmann in mid-January. (The media-shy company declined to be interviewed for this story.) Epic expects to add 800 positions a year for the next four or five years, Cover notes.
“They have an international operation that is growing very quickly. This will fuel their continued growth,” he says.
As heartening as that message is, the good news doesn’t stop there. Epic will continue to run its worldwide operation out of its nearly 1,000-acre Verona complex.
“There won’t be a European headquarters,” says Cover. “Their international operation will be staffed and operated from here.”
It’s big news that Epic will not decentralize its operation with regional headquarters. But for Dane County, the even larger payoff hinges on the answer to that opening question: Will Epic’s success give birth to an even larger health industry?
To read more, please go here.
I’ve written on Epic over the years.
For my 2002 story on how Epic wound up in Verona, please go here. You’ll see that back then the campus was valued at only $45 million.
Here’s another story from 2002 that describes how real estate speculators cashed in when they sold Epic the land for its new campus.
This cover story from 2008 cited Epic as an example of “green sprawl”.
Here is a timeline up to 2008 that details Epic’s growth over the years.
This column from 2010 details how strikingly ignorant city leaders were when they lost Epic to Verona.
And here a mayoral candidate Paul Soglin talks about his Epic regret .
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This entry was posted on February 26, 2014 at 6:55 am and is filed under Development, Tech, TheDailyPage.com/Isthmus. You can subscribe via RSS 2.0 feed to this post's comments.
Tags: Dan Wilson, Development, Epic Systems, Mark Bakken, Niko Skievaski, Nordic Consulting, Paul Barford, Steven Cover
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