Banner Health reviews

3.4

54% would recommend to a friend

(4,293 total reviews)
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Amy Perry

62% approve of CEO

49% positive business outlook

Banner Health has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 4,293 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Banner Health employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Healthcare industry (3.4 stars).

Reviews by job title

4K reviews
4.0
Mar 7, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Dedicated staff who believe strongly in excellent patient care. Patient care and patient safety drives all decisions. A large system enables employees to broaden their skill sets and learn different parts of healthcare. Each facility/hospital has its own culture. Competitive salaries and benefit packages. Retention of employees is still a focus despite this economy. A continuous improvement mentality is prevelant in most parts of the organization.

Cons

Some highly tenured staff have an entitlement mentality. When cuts are needed due to budget constraints a small minority of staff pout, instead of understanding that this is a different economy than it was 3 years ago (it seemed to be the highly tenured staff who were the most vocal.) Lack of a rigorous leadership development program, which is a problem because many leaders are home grown and could really use some revised leadership competencies. An IT platform that seems antiquated for the size and scope of the company.

4.0
Jul 30, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

With locations in 7 states, there are lots of opportunities to change jobs/locations but stay with the company. It's a health care company, but there are jobs in non-clinical areas like IT, finance, administrative support roles and the like if you don't work in a direct patient care role. In addition the the bigger facilities in the Phoenix-metropolitan area, there are some locations in small, rural communities (where I started).

Cons

These aren't necessarily downsides, but you need to be comfortable working in a large organization where some functions are centralized, and you must be comfortable with change and growth.

2.0
Dec 29, 2011

Really?

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

At one time I considered Banner Health to be a great place to work. Upon being hired, 1st impressions would lead you to believe you are in with a major healthcare company that is growing rapidly, thus, there being room for advancement or promotion (but not really). The benefits are okay, being able to have PTO is nice, getting a yearly bonus is smiled upon, and there are many good people who really do work hard and do their best to help others. Unfortunately, this is where much of it ends for most of us.

Cons

Let me first state I agree 100% with the downsides that many here have already wrote because they are true, and then some which I will write here. Banner Health states that the mission is "delivering excellent care." What mid to upper management doesn't seem to get is that you cannot achieve this goal when many are cheated, disrespected, intimidated, micro-managed, manipulated, over-worked, underpaid, etc...the cons seem to keep growing as the years progress. The company itself, it's facilities and those who are running them are turning into, for lack of a better word, what you might refer to as a nanny mentality. Cameras are everywhere, security surfs the internet all day when they aren't looking for cars in the wrong parking spaces to ticket or tow. You have to swipe to do nearly everything, including but not limited to printing. The computers are blocked so you can't access sites which are friendly, but music sites (use imagination) remain open for you to listen to music with swearing in it. It has and still is becoming a politically correct environment whereas no matter how right you are about the wrongs which someone else committed, they come after the few who actually have the nerve to speak up to the management and manipulate you to be in the wrong in ways you can't prove. The people who don't do their jobs or get away with everything often are related to the management in some way or another and the those same people who should be put on corrective action are not, even for repetitive insubordinate behavior and/or disrespect toward others. Bad people don't lose jobs, the good ones do for reporting the bad. If you actually show up to work and are productive, you set an expectation that must remain consistent regardless if the few people in your department are doing their work or not. Don't worry, you won't be recognized; Only the higher ups get that kind of satisfaction as they pat each other on the back and get their increases while implementing even more responsibility on you. On top of that, promotion is all inside as is a majority of the hiring process. If you pass someone corporate in the hallway, you almost get the feeling they are looking at you like a bug that needs to be squashed or that you "don't belong" because you aren't one of them. Another thing -they are shoving the "think-green" movement down everyone's throats whether you agree with it or not, investing a lot of funding into the ridiculous costs needed to convert or make everyone comply, all the while building more medical centers while preaching to the choir about cutting benefits or costs, leaving other facilities understaffed, stressing out the workers and then sending the smoking gestapo around as a result of the stressed out nurses or staff caught outside, even off the property! And the finale...gauging the employees through surveys to see who will take a flu shot when they decide make it 'mandatory.' It's your body, and there is no law, but hey you need to be protected and told what to put into it, no matter how harmful it may be. I suspect with the way things are going they will use this as a way to force out those not in compliance, saying it will cut even more costs, using the country's depression as it slides deeper down as an excuse, or they will use it or market it as a compliance or safety issue.

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