Misleading, deceiving, and ultimately exploitive - Anonymous employee Ballad Health Employee Review

1.0
Feb 21, 2024
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Very nice people worked in my department, but they had limited power to influence HR & Executive Leadership

Cons

I interned at Ballad for two years and was encouraged to apply for a scholarship about a year before graduation. The scholarship included a work commitment following graduation. I asked to know the salary range so that I could make an informed decision about whether the work commitment made sense for me. I was satisfied with the initial range, but after a year went by and they officially offered the job after graduating, they undercut it by almost $10,000. I attempted to counter and reminded them what they had told me initially. They said no, this new lesser offer was their final offer. As I spoke to others about my situation, I learned that Ballad had a reputation for doing this with students across other departments. I was floored and scrambled to decide what to do. Another person I interned with simply accepted the job as she felt she had no other choice. I applied to other jobs in my field and realized how much even the original offer was undercutting my earning potential. I also felt betrayed and concerned that if they would mislead me here that they would be likely to do so in other ways once I was a full-time employee. About two months later, they came back with an improved offer. The leadership directly in my former department kindly advocated for raises for everyone and I suppose HR/leadership finally listened. It was still less than what I was originally told and by that point I had already been offered other preferable opportunities for employment. When I declined, they requested scholarship repayment the same day. There had been a term in the contract about paying back prime plus 2% interest. Sadly, I did not know what this term meant or what it was intended to mean, I simply thought it meant the balance plus 2% interest. Prime actually meant "prime interest rate" which is essentially a number no one can predict. I ended up paying Ballad over a thousand dollars in interest for a "scholarship" that I held for a year once it became a loan. They made money off of a student/intern who worked there for free for two years with no complaints. I would have been much better off simply taking out a federal loan at a much lower interest rate with multiple options for repayment plans. I can't go back in time and change any of this, but I can tell my story. I hope other students don't fall prey to the enticement of scholarship/job offer without recognizing the major strings attached it. Towards the end of my internship, I saw massive turnover (~10 people) and I couldn't understand why. It makes much more sense now.

Explore other reviews about Ballad Health

5.0
Apr 17, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Organized, efficient, helpful, welcoming, kind

Cons

I don’t know of any cons yet

2.0
Jan 10, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Supportive coworkers and the use of Epic as the EHR.

Cons

Retirement match only deposited once per year instead of each pay period. This means less potential for gains in your own retirement account on that money throughout the year. And if you leave before the annual match, you forfeit an entire year's worth of company match. Pay is not at market level. In departments that are primarily remote, we are competing for talent among more prestigious orgs and also larger markets with much higher pay. It is nearly impossible to retain talent that isn't local and already accustomed to the lower wages (that have only become more stagnant since the merger). PTO (which includes vacation, holidays, and the first 3 days of illness leave) accrues at a much slower rate than other similarly sized organizations.

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