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Modernizing Medicine

Engaged Employer

"Career Shredder" - Regional Sales Consultant Modernizing Medicine Employee Review

1.0
Mar 2, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

A sales job here will teach you the value of patience and make you appreciate your next opportunity that much more. Plus they have free lunch once a week.

Cons

This was the biggest disappointment I have experienced in my entire career. The treatment of sales employees by management is shameful at best. Management has an uncanny ability to tune out everything they don't want to hear despite how true they are. Credit goes up the ladder and blame is scattered below without fail.

Explore other reviews about Modernizing Medicine

1.0
May 12, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The strongest aspect of the company is the resilience and talent of many of its individual contributors. I worked with smart, creative people who consistently found ways to keep critical functions operating despite significant operational and resource constraints. The environment offered extensive hands-on experience with complex systems, cross-functional dependencies, and high-volume operational problem solving. Employees often gained rapid professional growth simply because they were required to manage responsibilities well beyond the scope of their formal roles.

Cons

The company’s operational philosophy often seemed to confuse endurance with effectiveness. Employees were expected to absorb expanding responsibilities indefinitely, even when workloads had clearly exceeded sustainable limits. In some cases, entire operational domains were effectively owned by a single individual with little redundancy, limited support, and no realistic contingency planning. Leadership frequently discussed innovation and growth while failing to address basic organizational health issues such as staffing adequacy, process ownership, and burnout prevention. Months of excessive workload and escalating pressure resulted in predictable employee exhaustion, yet meaningful intervention from management or HR never materialized. There was also a noticeable tendency to treat systemic operational failures as isolated employee challenges instead of acknowledging broader leadership and resourcing problems. This created an environment where highly capable people spent more time compensating for organizational instability than performing strategic work.

4
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