Sedgwick reviews

3.2

53% would recommend to a friend

(4,592 total reviews)
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Mike Arbour

58% approve of CEO

51% positive business outlook

Sedgwick has an employee rating of 3.2 out of 5 stars, based on 4,592 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Sedgwick employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Insurance industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

5K reviews
3.0
Sep 18, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Entry Level position requires no field experience, and provides useful training, experience, and certifications. It is as good of a way to break into the field of workers' compensation as I believe one is likely to find. The office I worked at was well organized, trained us thoroughly, and put genuine effort into supporting its employees. No overtime was expected. Some supervisors were better than others, but overall, on the individual and office level things operated just about as well as they could under the circumstances given by upper management. The work week is less than 40 hours, and there are flex scheduling options and work from home options at a certain level of experience. Compared to the general state of the job market, this is middle-of-the-road. I would not warn anyone against working here, especially if they have recently graduated college - it is a good way to gain work experience, and comparatively speaking the base pay is pretty good.

Cons

The caseload is too high to truly give each claim the attention it deserves. Examiners/Representatives are responsible for 100+ active claims. This includes administering every part of the life cycle of a claim, all of which requires extensive documentation and information-gathering, as well as being the first point of communication for employers, claimants, medical providers, outside vendors, and attorneys. All of these things take time. Most claimants know almost nothing about workers' compensation, and explaining the information they need takes significant time. Answering calls from claimants on why this or that benefit or medical bill got delayed/denied, and what they can do about it, takes significant time. Making calls to employers, medical providers, vendors, and attorneys to iron out delays in medical treatment/work accommodations/benefits/bill payments/settlements takes significant time. All of these things take a lot of time, and they need doing for 100+ claims, and then you also have to do the main part of your job which is actually administering and making decisions on the claim, obtaining and filing information, and generally moving the claim to settlement. In short, it is very difficult if not impossible to be a good examiner - there just is not enough time in the work day to give your claimants and claims the time and care they deserve, while also juggling the sheer quantity of tasks required to administer the claims and get paperwork filed in a timely manner for all claims. Workers' comp claimants are relying on you to help them through the process, and to get them the medical care and benefits that they need. Claims examiners are responsible for 100+ peoples' livelihoods, and 100+ people's health. But even if you come in sincerely wanting to help your claimants, it is nearly impossible to give that help, because there just is not enough time to do it well for everyone. So you either become jaded and you stop providing that help, or you leave. This is part of why turnover was high, and also is not helped by the fact that turnover was high. Some people stayed on for years and years, but many either left the industry after about a year, or got their workers' comp certification and then left for a higher-paying company. Also, I was not paid enough to afford a one-bedroom apartment in the area that I worked. This is a fault of the job market and the housing market more than of this company specifically, but (a) I am not interested in normalizing this pay rate, (b) "the job market" is made up of individual companies making individual choices, and (c) the best way to retain staff is to pay them well. These are not problems that can be easily fixed with an office pizza party or a new training module. They require top-down change that may decrease profit somewhat, which is not a change companies tend to make.

1.0
Sep 1, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The position is fully remote.

Cons

From the moment I signed my offer, this has been excruciating to be part of this company. The recruiter didn't speak to me once I signed the offer. I was waiting on my background check to clear, to which I didn't find out until 3 days before I started. Mind you I had 3 weeks between my offer letter being signed and my start date. I had to reach out to Sedgwick multiple times before someone replied saying I was good to start. I literally had to reach out to my new manager to ask her, to which she took 6 days to reply. Not how you treat a new employee. I started on a Monday and I received my computer on Saturday afternoon before because the IT man called me that weekend to tell me how busy he was. He had a 1.5 hour call on a Saturday (again before I started or was getting paid) to go over my computer. My boss provided no training to me with the exception of maybe 1 hour total my first week and after 2 weeks of silence from her and anyone on the team (yes, I literally sat there for 2 weeks) she suddenly started sending me a ton of work with no training. I am resigning within the next month as this place is dysfunctional. I have asked for a computer charger and a mouse as I am currently using my personal one and no one follows up. It's evident they do not care about their employees. Side note, I have not met a single male since beginning. The department I am in is made up of 22 white females which seems odd to me.

2.0
Aug 31, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

great company, as a whole, that is extremely inclusive. Most of the people are fun to work with.

Cons

You get team leads who have never done your job and don't know the half of what you deal with daily. You are told you are great at your job, but not good enough to get a raise. If you complain you will deal with retaliation. You will be told you can not take unpaid time off only to find out you can requested it, but it will most likely be denied for no reason! You have shift bids every 6 months and if you're not perfect you'll get horrible hours, and they wont care if you have another job, they'll tell you too bad they should be your number one priority.

Viewing 49 - 51 of 4,592 Reviews

Glassdoor has 4,884 Sedgwick reviews submitted anonymously by Sedgwick employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Sedgwick is right for you.