Not all that glitters is gold - Anonymous employee Virta Employee Review

2.0
May 19, 2020
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Unlimited PTO, very flexible WFH options. Management doesn't hawk over you - they trust you to get work done, which is really nice. Catered lunches MWF. Nearly free health insurance. The best part about Virta is that the team (aside from some management) is genuinely passionate about the mission and about helping people.

Cons

Virta seems amazing, and in some aspects, it is, but the values come off as disingenuous and fraudulent because leadership doesn’t believe in them. It’s 100% understandable that you aren’t always going to align with or live out your organization’s values, but Virta really hammers them home multiple times a day on multiple lines of communication, so you expect HR to invest in hiring leadership who is true to their values. Virta recently laid off ~25% of its workforce at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. While they did offer severance and payout for health insurance, each teammate was immediately locked out of their computer after a short Zoom call with other teammates and HR telling them they were laid off. Each individual with questions had to seek out a meeting with HR and a manager to get more information about why they were laid off rather than a meeting being offered, which I think is incredibly inappropriate (and HR decided to just never show up to mine with no explanation). Employees sign a contract that they are at will; business is business, and Virta or any organization doesn’t owe any sort of explanation for why layoffs happen. It just seems fraudulent for Virta to pride itself on its values when they don’t live up to them when it really matters most. Virta encouraged employees who weren't laid off to not reach out to those who were, which is bizarre. Certain managers were amazing, and others were quite condescending, and pushed hard that they were so about the mission and being "people first" but their attitude, body language, and remarks didn't align with what they were trying to present themselves as. I get it that you don't have to be a perfect representation of the values of your organization, but certain acts of kindness or comments that were intended to be positive came off as disingenuous from certain managers, which left such a bad taste. Virta has had sexual misconduct allegations and multiple layoffs, historically all of which have been managed poorly. Managers would show up late to meetings consistently, were spread way too thin managing large teams, and weren’t able to discuss opportunities for improvement with their subordinates because they were expected to manage incredibly large teams and develop/implement systems for the business to run. A lot of the internal systems and processes are archaic, disorganized, and lacks division of responsibility. Pay is also lower than market. The outside looking in seems great, and the flexibility of the position (if you’re not a health coach) is great, but when you get into the thick of things, Virta leaves much to be desired.

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Pros

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Cons

very fast paced environment, exhausting

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1.0
May 6, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Remote working, having the ability to mute your microphone during waste-of-time propaganda meetings. Benefits for L&D, and work at home stipend.

Cons

Any role that is Member facing is treated like trash. When they post positions, the sum total has often been 2-3 million, with the absolute lowest salaries being those helping Members. That says a lot- but then again, it's a for profit healthcare company, so that says it all. Every meme/satire or TT you've ever seen about toxic corporate workplaces are made because of places like Virta. Every manager, associate director and director share skillsets with snake-oil salesmen of old. They talk and you're aware they're using poor manipulation techniques that just give you the creeps. Nothing matters. High performers, low performers, those who have second jobs who don't even do their job- doesn't matter. You're all the same to them. They'll find a carrot to try to dangle- like 3 percent peanut butter raises. They abhor internal promotions, so it's a dead end job, no matter how much you demonstrate your value with metrics, skillsets, education, and experience. During hiring they sing a song about promotions, growth, new company, yadda-yadda, but it's all a lie. There's no communication between teams, and tribal knowledge rules. The left had has no idea what the right is doing. It honestly feels like a money laundering operation for people who know directors to get insider jobs. Run.

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