Not the worst not the best place to work - Customer Care Representative Mom's Meals Employee Review

2.0
Apr 11, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Weekly pay, free soda, coffee n food, some awesome co-workers, M-F work week, benefits

Cons

Meeting the metrics is a joke, QA 98% or higher and adhering to scheduled break times is near impossible when you have to take calls up to the minute of your scheduled break, point system is ridiculous. Employees will that abuse calling in will show a pattern versus someone who doesn’t. supervisors give unrealistic goals which falls on those unrealistic metrics that you’re required to meet causing stress, supervisors don’t want any manager call backs (who does) but expect reps to “handle those calls” for way less money. If they don’t want those calls why would anyone else especially for less money? Supervisors are rarely at their desk always in meetings etc

Explore other reviews about Mom's Meals

5.0
Jun 7, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Company has a great work culture.

Cons

No cons in terms of work.

1.0
May 7, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Co-workers and free soda. Nothing about executive leadership

Cons

Worked in Revenue Cycle for nearly five years and experienced a significant decline in culture, morale, and operational support under current VP leadership. Major concerns included: unrealistic workload expectations during outages, system changes, and operational failures constant pressure to “do more” without proper staffing, reporting tools, or workflow support poor change management and repeated rollout of processes with little training or documentation Keep hiring temps at a higher $ rate. VP is open to hiring new hires over what leads make $ wise. inconsistent and reactive performance management lack of recognition for employees taking on additional responsibilities during critical periods increasing burnout, psychological safety concerns, and employee disengagement across teams A recurring pattern was that systemic issues were addressed by pushing teams to work longer hours and absorb more manual work instead of fixing root operational problems. The environment increasingly felt high-pressure, unsupported, and unsustainable. Over time, this contributed to burnout, erosion of trust, and a diminished sense of employee value and belonging. There are many hardworking employees within Revenue Cycle, but stronger leadership accountability, operational support, communication, and employee retention efforts are needed. The removal of leaders who helped create a supportive and collaborative environment had a major negative impact on morale and retention. VP is the one who needs to be replaced as they are diving things into the ground.

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