Horrible Upper Managers - IT Manager LCMC Health Employee Review

1.0
Apr 13, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The pay is decent and on time. Lower Level employees are great.

Cons

incompetent Management. Project Managers are sexist against men and will lie, withhold important information and set people up they don't like to be terminated or forced to resign. Certain IT Manager a step below the Director, keeps as much of her work to herself as possible as a form of job security, refusing to allow others who were hired to assist her to do their jobs. Then lied to the director to get that person fired so she could keep her job security. Not only that, but she will not allow IT to actually fix things for the long run, applying band-aids over things keeps problems occurring and keeps her employed. I mean seriously, how fiscally responsible is it to pay out 40k a year for someone to go over a spreadsheet for 4 hours a day rather than implement a long term fix that would not require that???

Explore other reviews about LCMC Health

5.0
Jun 1, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

work life balance allow for growth

Cons

Pay not worth it when promoted, new hires will make more than you at lower positions

1.0
May 11, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Exposure to Epic applications and healthcare workflows can provide useful experience early in your career. Some coworkers are supportive and genuinely trying their best within a difficult environment.

Cons

Leadership and management were the biggest weaknesses of this organization. There was a clear disconnect between upper management expectations and the actual workload analysts were handling daily. Productivity standards and ticket expectations often felt unrealistic, while staffing and support remained inadequate. Communication from leadership was inconsistent, and concerns raised by employees frequently felt dismissed rather than addressed. Burnout appeared normalized instead of taken seriously. Favoritism and uneven workload distribution created resentment within teams, with some employees consistently carrying heavier responsibilities while others were allowed significantly more flexibility. Training and onboarding support were lacking, particularly for newer employees who were often expected to "figure it out" independently while still being held to high productivity expectations. Morale suffered because employees did not feel heard, supported, or valued.

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