The best colleagues you'll ever have! - Anonymous employee Devoted Health Employee Review

5.0
Aug 3, 2018
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

When people ask me about my job at Devoted, I regularly say -- "You know how at most jobs you know who you can count on and who you can't? It's not like that here. Everyone does what they say they're going to do. It's a stellar team. There's a lot of trust and people depend on each other because we have to -- it's a real team effort." It's really fun to start something from the beginning. The mix of industry experts with tech/innovator types can't be beat.

Cons

Start-ups aren't for everyone. Be ready for ambiguity, be ready to pivot, and be ready to be really transparent about what's working and what's not -- so that the team can work quickly to fix (inevitable) problems and challenges.

Explore other reviews about Devoted Health

5.0
Jun 10, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-Welcoming and kind employee culture -Support and strong project feedback -Clear communication -Employees believe and support the mission of the company -Enthusiastic, talented, and passionate leaders

Cons

- There are two office spaces for hybrid work- they are great facilities but there are only two

3.0
Mar 4, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The mission to serve Medicare members well was clear, and the early culture reflected that. Teams were empowered, different leadership styles were welcomed, and people were trusted to solve problems in practical ways. There are still many talented and mission-driven people at the company who care deeply about the work and about members.

Cons

As the company grew rapidly, the culture began to change. Metrics have always been a focus, which is understandable in a performance-driven environment, but the emphasis increasingly shifted toward tracking activity and “effort” rather than measuring meaningful outcomes. Smaller assignments that once would have been handled with flexibility began to receive disproportionate attention, creating an environment that often felt more micromanaged than empowered. At the same time, accountability did not always appear to be applied consistently across leadership levels, which can be frustrating for teams that are being held to strict standards themselves. Frequent performance framework changes and constant iterations also created confusion and fatigue on the ground. In several cases, supervisor turnover concentrated under the same leadership should have been treated as a signal worth examining. Overall morale in parts of the organization has noticeably declined compared to earlier years.

5
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