Low company morale & disorganized processes - Care Manager Magellan Health Employee Review

2.0
Jul 20, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

-Good compensation and am able to work from home -Don't need to do anything physical -Some co-workers are very nice and willing to help

Cons

-Manager micromanages the teams every move. -Bad office culture where the members, your manager, and other staff finger point and blame the care managers. -Health benefits are so expensive and not good at all. -Some members are really difficult to handle, and the caseload of members are too much to deal with that you have to work at the weekends too, without any overpay. -HR dept. is not very hands-off, where you need to find everything through a job aid to figure out how to put in overtime hours, time-off, etc. -A disorganized company where the processes on how to do something changes every other week or month. -Orientation is horrible, you learn just how to use their computer software, but not how to actually manage a caseload of members and the actual problems that may arise from members. -Managers expect prompt email replies and when they call you, but they don't reply to emails or pick up their phones when there is an actual issue/need.

Explore other reviews about Magellan Health

5.0
Apr 28, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I worked within a team the provided work/life balance. I felt needed and valued and contributed to the mission of my team.

Cons

The company is going being acquired by a small investment group. There has been layoffs which I feel the acquisition is reason to the reduction in work force. I feel more benefits could be offered under the insurance policy such as gym memberships. Or we can receive some form offset for gym memberships and annual physicals.

2.0
Jun 8, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great teammates who went the extra mile for each other on a regular basis.

Cons

Leadership in training left much to be desired. Instructional designers were never involved in the analysis phase. Every project was handled differently. No real project management styles, no instructional design models ever used. Everything felt very unstructured. Very difficult to get access to SME's and questions went around in circles. Some of the worst micromanagement I think I have ever endured. Poor communication, lack of transparency and clarity. Lots of pointless repetition and confusion in meetings. People were frequently asked to repeat even the simplest of questions, yet the questions were somehow never answered, just loads of meaningless jargon. Deadlines were never stated clearly. Abrupt changes to projects on a regular basis, and the changes often were not communicated to all stakeholders. More than once I was assigned to do a "very important" project that was suddenly abandoned and then never revisited, while I was instead given bizarre busywork. Many good people were treated badly and then left. The team WAS fairly diverse but almost every person of color on my team was laid off or else voluntarily left at the end of 2025. The actual trainings produced by my team were often quite a mess. Document control was nonexistent. The same training modules were created over and over, with slight differences each time - but these redundancies were rarely ever tracked, just more and more re-work of the exact same material. Meanwhile, I was yelled at for things I was not even involved in, accused of missing a deadline that I was not told about, and confronted in a "surprise" super-early-morning meeting, for allegedly messing up some project that I had literally never even heard of. To be honest, I don't think I was ever treated worse by any management at any other job I have ever had. I occasionally wondered if I was being deliberately gaslit just to see how I would react, like some sort of sadistic Stanley Milgram experiment. If that WAS the case, I hope they at least got some useful data out of me, because I did not enjoy it, to say the least. I think that was just par for the course, though, because I eventually learned that several of my co-workers had similar experiences - some even worse than mine. It was a relief to be laid off.

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