The benefits are too expensive for what they offer. I recommend shopping brokers and benchmarking plans to ensure employees are receiving competitive, cost-effective benefits.
If you’re an HR professional who enjoys building, improving, and being proactive, this can be a frustrating environment. It often felt reactive to the point of avoidant, with issues addressed only after they became problems.
There is a noticeable resistance to change. New ideas are often met with “that’s not how we do things here” instead of genuine discussion. As someone with a background in learning and development, I suggested modernizing the company’s training program and found those ideas were dismissed almost immediately. That ultimately became part of my decision to leave.
HR related tech is functional but not well integrated. Multiple systems don’t communicate with one another, resulting in unnecessary manual work, duplicate data entry, and inefficiencies that could be eliminated.
Training could use a complete refresh. Too much critical information is packed into lengthy documents instead of being delivered through a structured learning experience.