Pros
-Salary has gotten better. -Open PTO. -Prudential is nice.
Cons
-The amount of work given to the individual team members is outrageous. But even if you raise our voice to try to protect your team from unfair workload, no one listens. The director and VP just got with the flow of squeezing every ounce of work even if that means no breaks in between calls, then so be it. Our teams can barely make a living and they can't get a fair shake at a balanced workload? That's stressful for the SRMs too since we have to put on a good face and go with their plan when we've been in those roles before and know its not feasible and its a setup for failure. This may not be a real tech company but we're also supposed to treat people much more fair than we have. -Another thing is the lack of professionalism across the leadership team in residential and rehabs. It's not easy doing your job when the people leading you don't deserve to be in their roles and consistently make you uncomfortable. Shouldn't there be educational qualifiers for managers and directors and VPs? Even with certain managers having inappropriate reputations, they are still promoted to directors. Is it appropriate for the director of your department to continuously ask subordinates out even when previous requests have been denied? If we get these requests over and over without fear of consequence, they know they are protected. -The last thing, these new initiatives are just poor decisions. We just need to stop trying to be a type of company we're not and focus in the area we've been in because we barely do that correctly. Since the merger, we've lost our vision and focus on what's really going on within each department. We're being worked to the ground and then have to deal with ineffective and coercive managerial tactics that teeters the harassment threshold.