Health Catalyst reviews

3.4

45% would recommend to a friend

(780 total reviews)
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Ben Albert

Not enough data to show CEO approval

24% positive business outlook

Health Catalyst has an employee rating of 3.4 out of 5 stars, based on 780 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Health Catalyst employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Healthcare industry (3.4 stars).

Reviews by job title

780 reviews
2.0
May 24, 2019

Opportunity for improvement

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Catalyst has a big focus on employees, which translates most visibly to things like benefits, pay, paid time off, job security, work conditions, etc. The company is growing and generally regarded as a leader within the healthcare analytics space. Our culture and principles, when followed, are great.

Cons

Lack of leadership. While our CEO, Dan, is a phenomenal leader, our executive team and managers, from my perspective, have a great deal of room for improvement. There are pockets of excellence, but we generally have a lot of work here, specifically, following the company’s stated culture and operating principles, which you can find on Catalyst’s website and are repeated in every all team member meeting (monthly). On culture, there appears to be a lack of humility -- specifically listening, learning and assuming positive intent. On the operating principles, transparency is the biggest area for improvement. While Dan himself is a great leader, it can’t always be Dan. To use a sports analogy, we have a star player who is burdened by the responsibility to score every point. We need that star player to also coach and develop the rest of the executives’ and managers’ ability to lead. Everything is a priority! I have a background in growth companies, so my concern isn’t about having a lot to do. Rather, it feels like we are doing a lot of things poorly rather than doing a few things well. A great example of this is the 360 review process we recently went through as a company (any people managers, including our executive team). It seems like it was discussed throughout all of 2018, while it only was rolled out to most managers in the last handful of weeks of 2018. There has been little follow up on the 360. Shortly after the 360s wrapped up, there was a seemingly self-congratulatory announcement on a companywide call that the 360 review process had been completed. Four months later, HR staff held a webinar where they suggested team members reach out to their managers if they’d like to review the feedback, four months after the 360s ended. Which Health Catalyst do you work for? The software company, or its fierce rival, the professional services company? The chasm between the two major business units is holding the company back. It pains me to see a company that I once rated at 5 stars to go to 2 stars in just a couple years.

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Health Catalyst Response
7y
Thank you for sharing this detailed and insightful perspective. I have read and reread your review multiple times. And I believe there are important elements that we need to pay attention to as leaders and managers, and that we can improve. Let me address a few of the topics you raised and offer some thoughts as well as an action plan, which we'll also review together in today's ATM meeting, striving to exercise the principle of transparency, ESPECIALLY when it's hard. First, as it relates to the need for each of us as leaders, each day, to strive to live up to the Health Catalyst Way, I agree strongly with your perspective that it must be each team member and leader, every single day. And I agree that we often fall short, myself included. Part of our values includes giving people a second chance, but that also assumes positive intent, that each individual is striving to live up to the values every day. And each time we fall short of the values of the company it erodes the character of the company. Further, if we behave in such a way that there are some individuals who we treat as "exceptions" to the standard of striving to live up to the values, then this erodes the character of the company further. I have said in other settings and will repeat now, that no one is untouchable at Health Catalyst -- not me, not any member of our board or leadership team. We should each feel accountable, every day, to live up to the values. I know that we fall short, and I would be happy to visit privately with you about any instances where we need to address an issue with a leader, and I will keep our conversation confidential, and will also take action to address the issue as well. I apologize that you've experienced situations where leaders at the company have fallen short. Second, regarding our follow up and follow through around the manager 360-degree feedback process, I have had the same concern that you raised, for some time. In fact, three days before you posted this review, I put an agenda topic on our weekly Leadership Team agenda to highlight that I felt we hadn't done nearly enough to systematize our use of 360-degree feedback, in helping managers to become better and more effective. Yes, we have taken a few steps, and actually I have personally spent many hours reviewing the feedback for literally every manager at Health Catalyst. And, importantly, I leveraged this feedback as an important input into the 8 new Leadership Team positions that were filled. But we haven't become as systematic as we should. But we are working on it, and we'll talk about some of our plans in that regard at today's All Team Member meeting. Third, regarding the rivalry between the Technology organization and the Professional Services organization, sadly I agree with much of your commentary, and have been concerned about this dynamic for quite some time. One of the primary driving factors underpinning our reorganization several months ago, where all the product lines and all the services functions now report up to the COO was to try to organizationally "unite" the technology and the professional services groups as one, rather than having continued divisions. Also, as we hired SVP and General Managers for the business functions, I emphasized to each of those leaders how much I expected them to work "as one" across product and services, and this is a central theme for Paul Horstmeier (our COO) as he works within our company on the next chapter of our success. But these changes take time. I already see significant evidence of improvement, but I also see evidence that we have more work to do. I am deeply convinced that we will not accomplish our mission if we are not united. So we will shine a light on this issue, and we will ask for the help of every team member in making meaningful progress here in 2019 and beyond. This is something I repeatedly emphasize in my 1:1 discussions with Leaders at Health Catalyst. Finally, I wanted you to know that while these challenges can feel discouraging at times, I share your hopefulness. I believe we can change and improve. And we are working towards a worthy mission, one larger than any one of us. Thank you for your contributions these past 3+ years. Thank you for your courageous transparency in sharing this review, and I have a personal goal that we might improve sufficiently that perhaps in a year or so you might genuinely feel a desire to update your review on Glassdoor (as we ask every team member to do once a year) and be able to share that you have personally experienced improvement in each of these areas. Again, I'd also welcome the opportunity to visit with you 1:1, privately, so that I can better understand your experience. If you're open to meeting with me, just reach out to Jenn Howard and we'll set some time up. Thanks, Dan
3.0
Aug 9, 2023

Mixed feelings about this place

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- The remote first company culture supports working from anywhere. - Executive leadership seems to be genuinely striving hard to manage things well through what are some very tough times over the last year and a half or so.

Cons

- Personnel cuts over the last year or so have cost us many of our best engineers. - The cultures among many product and engineering teams are behind best practices and without change will not lead to the outcomes the company is striving for. - Business outlook feels uncertain. Transparency has dramatically decreased over time, but there seems to be some reason for a positive outlook. - DEI initiatives here are almost entirely hollow and in many cases cause more overall strife and harsh feelings among employees than positive outcomes. The company DEI leaders are painfully blind to their biases here. - There are lots of in groups and inner circles where all the promotions and opportunities are sort of gate-kept. Very little career progression for most and those who really want to chase career advancement will leave before too long.

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Health Catalyst Response
2y
Thank you for taking the time to write this thoughtful review. As you rightfully point out, market realities have been difficult. We have needed to make strategic adjustments that rely on building strong and deep partnerships with our clients. As such, I believe our tech-enabled managed services offering has strong potential to scale improvement throughout the industry. In regards to our emphasis on diversity and inclusion, we care about every team member and strive to enable each team member’s high engagement so they can optimally contribute to our mission. We always have more to learn here. Please reach out to our Chief People Officer, Linda Llewellyn, or our Chief DEI Officer, Trudy Sullivan, so one of them can learn more about what you’ve observed around our DEI initiatives. Your commentary on our leadership is interesting. We try to live up to all of our values and operating principles, which include being world-class, but there are times we will fall short. I would like to understand if there are specific situations we can help address here. Please reach out to me, if you are comfortable, or Linda Llewellyn, so we can discuss your concerns. Thanks for your more than nine years of contributions to our success. I am hopeful that there are many more and look forward to discussing your experiences with you, if you are comfortable doing so. Best, Dan Burton
3.0
Nov 1, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

My tenure at Health Catalyst has been short and uneventful but I will strive to maintain objectivity in this evaluation. Let's start with the pros: 1. Great Work-Life Balance: This is by the far the best attribute of Health Catalyst. The company has a large number of remote workers and this autonomy allows for a healthy work-life balance. Get your work done, keep your customers/project team happy and all will be well. I've had more than enough free time to pursue personal interests and hobbies. 2. Fringe Benefits: I'll separate compensation from fringe benefits. I think the fringe benefits the company offers to remote employees are very generous: they subsidize cell phones, internet, personal gym fees, some home office expenses, etc. I hadn't experienced that at past companies and find that as a nice reprieve to what I view as compensation concerns with the company at-large. 3. Friendly coworkers: I feel like the majority of Catalyst employees I've met seem like hard-working people who don't gripe much and just want to get their jobs done. Don't come here expecting a Big 4 atmosphere. If you need that level of competition, you won't be fulfilled. I'm on the fence about it myself. I think it's nice to have a laid back culture but maybe not at a time when you're in the post-IPO, need to grow quickly and effectively stage of the company. 4. The Mission: So why would I put the mission at the end of pros? I think historically Health Catalyst has been a mission-first/culture-first company exemplified by the values of the Founders. The mission is clear and altruistic: make healthcare better by utilizing analytics to drive positive changes in outcomes. Everybody knows the US Healthcare system is in desperate need of changes, so the mission makes sense. My issue, however, is that I feel Health Catalyst is losing that vision day-by-day and the variance between the pipe dreams of the Executive Team and the reality of employee operations grows larger and larger and larger.

Cons

1. The Variance - my main concern with Health Catalyst is the huge variance I've observed between the mission of the executives and the realities of the company. I came to Health Catalyst specifically because of the buzz I heard around them and the marketing materials I read talking through all the positive changes they've made with healthcare systems. I feel like that facade completely broke down for me once I actually entered the company: politics, constant restructuring, bad coordination, under-utilization of employees, and competing interests between services and product teams are all symptoms of a company with bad management operations and oversight. It doesn't matter how often you deliver a keynote talking up the "humble" values of our company when the reality is plagued with groups going off in their own directions, chasing values they think are best at the time and defending their territory if another team breaches theirs. The best corporate goals should flow from top-to-bottom with everybody pointed towards them, when they aren't, your single hierarchy breaks down into many and chaos emerges among your management class. The company will respond to this by saying we offer plenty of opportunities to ask leadership questions and hear from employees, but how does answering a single question in one all-team-meeting or focus group really translate into operational change? Lip service means nothing without action. 2. Conservative with technology and services: Catalyst is fairly antiquated in the technology it employs and sells to customers. We sell a solution which is effectively a mix of other company's tools and relational databases combined with our services. Pushes to move to more modern architectures and implementation frameworks are stymied in light of "what's worked then still works now". That works fine for a gigantic software corporation with thousands of customers, not for a growth stage company who is trying to compete with them. That being said, the company is investing into R&D for our own slate of products but I wonder what that commitment looks like in the long-term because of the bigger question in the room... 3. The Reality of being Public - Health Catalyst just went public a few months ago and while we are riding high on the wave of meeting that milestone, I don't think most employees here understand the reality of being a public company when you're still at growth stage and have the issues I laid out earlier in The Variance. The scrutiny on this company will only go up more and more the longer we are in the market. If people aren't doing a diligent job of monitoring their operations expenses and how much revenue they're driving, Catalyst is going to have to start doing things they really haven't had to do much before: crunch down on operations, make strategic cuts to expenses and reallocate resources to the only things actually making them money. I thoroughly wonder if the company went public too early. 4. Compensation for Remote Employees: in a topic that has been brought up many times in previous Glassdoor Reviews, All-Team Meetings, Internal Company Surveys, etc. etc. etc.....the company still doesn't do cost-of-living adjusted salaries for remote employees. So regardless of whether you live in Manhattan or Liberty, Missouri you get paid exactly the same for your role. I get it, it is not Catalyst's fault that their remote employees don't live in Salt Lake City, but don't call yourself a remote-friendly company if you don't do an established salary practice almost every other software company does. You will point to the fact that you make sure everybody eventually reaches the 75% national salary average for their role, but that is a fallback mechanism you use to skirt the reality of what you are doing especially considering the vast differences in cost-of-living for parts of this country where even a 75% average isn't sufficient. Just like we tell our customers that metrics are only one component of reality vs operational change and patient satisfaction, give yourself the same feedback and follow industry norms. 5. Employee Satisfaction as a component of our quarterly bonus - This is a perverse mechanism for granting bonus rates and yet I'm surprised it doesn't get brought up much. While I value the aesthetics of claiming that you care so much about employee satisfaction you even include it as a factor in our bonus payout, I find it a huge conflict-of-interest to your employees as they are actually financially penalized to be negative about their satisfaction at the company. Maybe a better mechanism would be employee satisfaction as just a component for management and executive bonuses where you have skin in the game for results.

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Health Catalyst Response
6y
Thank you for taking the time to share this detailed review describing your experience during your first 1-2 years at Health Catalyst. I have read and reread your comments, while also allowing some time to pass before responding, to try to ensure that I was open to receiving this constructive feedback and then working to improve based on the feedback. Let me offer some thoughts in response to each category of feedback that you've shared, starting with the positives of your experience thus far at Health Catalyst. I'm encouraged to hear that you have realized positive work/life balance, which is not always the case, particularly for team members who are in their first 1-2 years at the company. I'm encouraged to hear that this has been a positive aspect of your experience at Health Catalyst. Second, I'm glad to hear that you've found the benefits, including those available to remote team members, to be positive. Many of those benefits were added, over time, based on feedback that leadership received, through skip-level 1:1s (each year I have a goal to conduct 200 skip-level 1:1s with team members), through Glassdoor review feedback, through the semi-annual Gallup engagement survey feedback (we as a leadership team review every comment submitted every six months, and then take action based on this feedback, every six months, and have done so for many years), through "ask leadership anything" questions and comments, and through other channels like our all-team-member meetings held every two weeks. Over the past eight years we've made over 100 company policy changes as a result of team member feedback through these channels. I'm also glad to hear you feel connected to friendly coworkers and to the mission of the company. Now let's turn to the list of 'cons' that you shared, based on your experience thus far at Health Catalyst. First, you share that you observe a large variance between the company mission and the reality on the ground with clients. This is very concerning to me, and I would welcome the chance to better understand this, if you'd be willing to meet 1:1 with me to help me better understand what you're experiencing. I believe strongly in many of the principles that you espouse about how to consistently execute against a mission across clients and across organizational boundaries, and our companywide bonus plan is designed to reinforce this shared commitment to three consistent strategic objectives. There is significant performance-related evidence that our clients are realizing accelerated measurable improvements, based on the number of client-approved improvements occurring each quarter, tied to our first bonus objective. So I'd welcome the chance to visit 1:1 with you about the disconnects you're seeing so that we can address those disconnects and work to improve. Second, you share feedback that we are conservative in our use of cutting-edge technology. I appreciate this perspective, and this balance between not abandoning what has worked in the past, while also working to leverage and adopt the benefits of modern technology innovations, is something we discuss and debate as a leadership team, at length, throughout the year, and in earnest, as part of each annual planning cycle. Our ~$40M annual investment in R&D is designed to enable us to invest across that spectrum, but admittedly we apply judgment in allocating that investment. We welcome team members to be courageously transparent in speaking up to ensure we fully understand what you're observing and have the benefit of that information as we make investment allocation decisions, and now is an opportune time to do so, as we are in the midst of 2020 planning. Please share your perspective and feedback with technology and professional services leadership, and we will be more data-informed as as result. Third, you shared feedback about the reality of being a publicly traded company. This is something we as a leadership team have considered, carefully, and at length, for many years. Our considerations were informed by the direct experience of members of our leadership team who had spent portions of their career within publicly traded technology companies. For example, I'm grateful to have brought over a decade of personal experience at publicly traded technology companies, including a few years where I participated directly in the quarterly process of preparing for and participating in earnings releases and related activities, prior to joining Health Catalyst nearly nine years ago. This experience, coupled with dozens of conversations as a board, all informed our perspective of when we felt we would be sufficiently prepared to become a successful public company. This process included identifying size, scale and predictability thresholds for our business to achieve prior to considering an IPO. It also included many quarters of "practice" prior to becoming a public company. Much of this preparation and consideration occurred in the months and years before you joined Health Catalyst, so you would not have likely had visibility to this preparatory work. Given this work, and after a great deal of careful consideration as a board and as a leadership team, we felt prepared to move forward and become a publicly traded company. Now, several months post-IPO, with the benefit of some hindsight, I see the benefits accruing to the company because of these years of preparations. And one of the benefits I feel most positively about is the direct benefit to every team member of the equity they have received and will receive being both liquid and valuable. Because for many, many years we have made every team member an owner in the company, very soon, each team member will have the ability to leverage that ownership in meaningful ways, which feels very positive. Fourth, you shared feedback about the geographic salary differential. As you noted, this is something we have discussed multiple times, and it is on our prioritized list of benefits we hope to have "earned the right" to add as part of the 2020 planning process. To the third topic above, concerning the realities of being a publicly traded company, we are expected to achieve financial sustainability as a company, which then requires us to "earn the right" to add benefits to team members, which we work hard to do each year. And each year for many, many years, we have added benefits (as I referenced previously) as soon as we could do so within a financial sustainability framework. I am hopeful that the geographic differential will be added as part of 2020 planning. Fifth, you suggested a perverse incentive in including team member satisfaction in the bonus calculation for all team members, and that a better approach would be to only have managers/leaders' bonuses tied to this metric. That is in fact exactly what we do at Health Catalyst (and that has been our bonus approach for many years). Only people managers' bonus is impacted by the team member satisfaction number, and that happens only in a negative way for those people managers -- their bonus is calculated as the LOWER of the team member satisfaction and the customer satisfaction results, as one of the "burdens" of leadership. There is no perverse incentive here. This is noted in every bonus slide, and we try to highlight this each time we discuss the team member bonus, but hopefully this clears up any confusion on this topic. Now let me turn to the advice that you offered in the "Advice to Management" category. First, regarding your advice to hire an outside firm to provide an objective view of our management operations, I agree that this can be very helpful. Over the past eight years we have, on multiple occasions, brought in outside parties to help us understand our performance, to great benefit. In fact, we currently have an outside consultant reviewing our operational performance across multiple business and functional areas, including sales, marketing, communications, technology and professional services. I agree with you that this can be very helpful and healthy to do. Also, we are consistently adding new talent and perspectives from outside the company, including at leadership levels, and we'll announce a few new leadership team positions we will be posting both internally and externally as part of our 2020 planning process, during tomorrow's all-team-member meeting. And I agree that we need a mix of experience in order to continue to grow and scale, including team members who have public company experience. I still see great value in team members who also have direct healthcare delivery experience as well. Let me conclude by thanking you for choosing to recently join Health Catalyst, and for sharing your perspective and feedback. I hope that the information I have shared in response will provide some helpful additional context, which might be of use to you, and I hope that your experience at Health Catalyst becomes better and better over time. This is certainly my hope and goal for every team member at Health Catalyst. And, let me reiterate that if you would be open to visiting 1:1 with me regarding disconnects you see in our commitment to the mission, I would appreciate better understanding this topic so we can work to improve. Thank you again! Best, Dan
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