Honor reviews

3.0

43% would recommend to a friend

(338 total reviews)
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Seth Sternberg

48% approve of CEO

46% positive business outlook

Honor has an employee rating of 3.0 out of 5 stars, based on 338 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Honor 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

338 reviews
1.0
Mar 17, 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Free food and great people in Austin.

Cons

Honor is a textbook definition of “Peter’s Principle”. Employees are promoted to “warm a seat” or because they were good at their job and are now managing others. They are also hired on as managers because of their prestigious degrees/previous job titles/previous companies. These so-called managers (also some sr. managers and directors) have no clue on how to coach, hold 1:1 meetings, document, or manage performance. As a result, there is a huge amount of miscommunication, uncertainty, over-hiring, and lack of accountability. The real reason for the layoffs is that these “managers” will hire others to do their jobs or for illogical reasons. Once Honor realizes that they aren’t profitable these “managers” will lay off these employees to hide the fact that they lack competence and to blame it on everything else but themselves. This is why you see lay offs occurring every single year for the past three years. Many of the SF employees are so out of touch they don’t realize the negative effects of their actions when they make decisions. Most of them can’t even comprehend the realities of our caregivers and what it’s like to work a low-paying job in a high risk health care environment. Not sure why Honor pays for HR or L&D because they don’t do anything for the employees or the company. If anything, they are just puppets to these “managers.”

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Honor Response
6y
We appreciate your feedback on your experience at Honor. The people in the Austin office and the team culture here is really great, and we’re glad to hear that they were a bright spot in your time with Honor. Regarding managers, we have had several organizational changes as we continue to test and learn the best organizational model for our unique business, which unfortunately has led to difficult, but necessary layoffs. We do have confidence in the geographically aligned operation model that we’ve recently moved to, and our hope is that we can now build the right structured team and grow all of our people, managers included, to excel in their roles. As for our People team, including our HRBPs and Learning and Development, we have recently made investments in this team to further support all employees at Honor, regardless of role or level. We also appreciate your feedback about connecting our corporate teams in San Francisco to our field operations teams. We have taken this feedback and have made more efforts in 2020 to connect our leaders in San Francisco to our daily operations in Care, which has been proving fruitful.
1.0
Aug 8, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

In theory, this company is solving a huge need. They will sell you that they are mission driven, but don't be fooled. They are margin driven, and they are conducting business like every other slimy, money hungry business out there. But what is worse, is they pretend to me mission driven and altruistic, when the mission is actually used to manipulate and guilt employees into thinking they should be worked to the bone and treated like crap in order to "change the world." The leaders at this company do not care about their employees. They care about making money and making smart business moves. The sooner they own that, the better.

Cons

Poor treatment of Care Professionals: Honor claims to want to treat their Care Professionals better than anywhere else so that they in turn provide the best possible care for their clients. They do not. They get paid less than at their other agencies, and they get less support from the company than if they were working for a smaller agency, because they are essentially dealing with the call center as their employer. An overworked, under appreciated call center. Poor treatment of internal employees: As mentioned above, they will manipulate you into blurring your boundaries on what is acceptable workplace treatment and culture in order to "change the world." Doing the same thing and expecting a different result is insanity. Treating your employees like machines, not being aware enough to realize you are using your mission to justify bad behavior and treatment, and then expecting to make real, lasting, positive change in the world doesn't make sense, and is gross. This is the kind of culture where the people who are killing themselves get rewarded. If you are willing to give up everything else in your life to work around the clock and don't question any of their processes or decisions, you will get a little attention from leadership and likely a lateral move, rewarding you with more work and no additional pay. A smart company, a company who cares for their employees, does not reward a lack of boundaries. Instead, they support mature adults who understand their limits and maintain a sustainable amount of work. Don't expect to do the best work of your life here. You will be too maxed out for that to be possible. Run, don't walk, away from this company. They are building the pyramids, and they don't care how many people are sacrificed in the process as long as they get built.

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Honor Response
6y
I am sorry that your experience was not what we hope for our employees here at Honor. Although we are growing at a very fast pace, we are dedicated to always improving our employee and client experiences. We appreciate you taking the time to write a review and providing us with feedback.
3.0
Feb 5, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

1. Honor is truly a values-based company. Our values are not just a poster on the wall but are things we enact in our work each and every day. 2. Your peers and co-workers can be some of the best people you work with. Most people here are genuinely kind spirited, intelligent, have good intentions, and are supportive. I can only count a handful of people in the organization who are truly toxic. 3. In order to be successful in any role at Honor you need to have a certain level of empathy for others with a different lived experience than yourself. Empathy for clients, care pros, coworkers etc. If you lack the ability to put yourself in someone else's shoes and try to understand their lived experience, you will quite simply not succeed here. One common thing I have seen amongst folks who were not successful here (IE: fired or laid off) was that they lacked empathy or understanding for others with a different lived experience. Having empathy at Honor isn't about being "politically correct" or "sounding nice." It is truly a crucial quality one must have in order to be successful in any role here. This is truly special and something you will not find at many other companies, where being soulless is rewarded. Of all things, I truly hope this stays throughout Honor's journey. 4. 100% work from home during COVID and a promise to not return to the office if it is not safe. 5. Catered Lunch & snacks when we were in the office. 6. Decent benefits/pay compared to other similar companies, but could be better in some area

Cons

Management, management, management.... Many of the comments about unqualified and incompetent management are unfortunately true. This is of course not applicable to all managers but is to at least 2/3 of Honor's management. Honor's logo should be next the term Peter's Principle in the dictionary. In order to be promoted, you have to drink management's Kool-Aid, regardless of your performance or how you are viewed amongst your peers. This in itself underscores many of the problems with management, as good management would be able to work with different types of people with different viewpoints, opinions, styles, and rally them behind a common goal. Our management clearly lacks the ability to do that. In addition, it is quite jaw dropping how much of the management on the Care Team has ZERO Home Care experience outside of Honor. I think this also hurts us quite badly. 2. Churning/Burning of Carepros. Just an endless hamster wheel of hiring/firing Carepros. There is pretty much no CarePro management team. Carepros are only coached/mentored when they do something wrong and by someone who has never been a Carepro themselves.... We desperately need Carepro Managers who solely focus on this. Many of our Carepros are not used to working remotely. They are used to reporting to a brick/mortar agency, receiving a schedule, filling out a paper timesheet, etc. Working at Honor can be a big jump for them and many just sink or swim. While we do many things to support them, we equally set them up for failure just as much. 3. Job metrics are basically non-existent for most roles. HR says that they are working on this, and I truly hope they deliver. There are almost no measurable or clear expectations outlined for most roles. Many of the times in past performance reviews, performance was measured on how managers or other stakeholders felt about a certain individual and their contributions. It is honestly no surprise why Diversity, Equity and Inclusion has been such a focus as of the past 6 months and why many employees flagged it as an area Honor struggles with. Not setting clear job expectations nor having quantifiable ways to measure someone’s job performance leaves the door Wide Open for bias. 4. Tied to point 3, on several occasions I have heard from leadership that the reason why we can’t do X (like measurable job metrics) is because we are a startup. I truly hate this excuse and find it to be discouraging. It would make sense if we were a 10 person startup, but we are not. We are a 300+ person company with over half a decade under our belt. Some of the areas where we lack sophistication are truly non-excusable and again, I think ties back to a lack of unqualified management. Please quit hiding behind our startup status as a reason for why we lack sophistication (give Honor more credit). 5. Work life balance is almost non-existent. There are literally some people at Honor who willingly work 7 days a week and are basically on call with zero boundaries. This should be concerning (why is someone not capable of completing their work in a standard 40 hour week?) an is quite toxic. Quit rewarding and normalizing such blatantly problematic work behavior. 6. Communication can be very poor across teams. Again, I think this mainly ties back to poor management. Management sets the tone for everything, and I think in many ways they fail to set the tone for productive and efficient communication amongst each other, which trickles down to the rest of the org.

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