The Cigna Group reviews

3.5

64% would recommend to a friend

(6,784 total reviews)
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David Cordani

67% approve of CEO

56% positive business outlook

The Cigna Group has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 6,784 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The The Cigna Group employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Healthcare industry (3.4 stars).

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7K reviews
1.0
Nov 8, 2023

Directionless Windsock

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Many things once considered positive have been removed, reduced, or restricted. For example, full-time, remote work used to be a benefit. Not anymore. In Cigna’s Future of Work policy, most employees are forced to work in a Cigna office 50% of the time, including remote employees before COVID-19. What’s the reason for this change? Collaboration. Cigna also used to have a generous educational reimbursement program. However, after the acquisition of Express Scripts, Cigna cut the annual reimbursement amount nearly in half. Similarly, Cigna used to have an occurrence program for unplanned absences. The occurrence program provided employees with up to five occurrences per year with up to five days per occurrence. After acquiring Express Scripts, Cigna removed this policy and stated that PTO and sick time were now combined—no increase in PTO either. In short, most pros that were a differentiator for Cigna as an employer are now comparable to other employers or worse.

Cons

Where to start? How about rolling layoffs? That’s right, Cigna is expected to lay off ~ 10% of its workforce. Instead of being transparent about the “need” to reduce its workforce, Cigna has decided to be mum’s the word. This has left the Cigna workforce in a state of constant anxiety and fear. If rolling layoffs weren’t enough, Reuters reports that Cigna is seeking to sell off its Medicare business. Some speculate this is why Cigna agreed to pay $172 million to resolve allegations that it violated the False Claims Act. The suit alleges that Cigna submitted and failed to withdraw inaccurate and untruthful diagnosis codes for its Medicare Advantage Plan enrollees. In addition, Cigna has agreed to pay a $37 million settlement for Medicare fraud. Let’s not forget the class-action lawsuit against Cigna for violating California’s state law requiring insurers to conduct a thorough, fair, and objective investigation of patient claims. Instead, Cigna used a PXDX algorithm to deny claims in large batches. What about health insurance? Not great. Unfortunately, Cigna treats its employee health plans as another revenue source. Cigna provides high deductible plans that are much worse than its commercial plans. The culture, or lack thereof, is abysmal. As previously mentioned, Cigna is not transparent, and communication is poor. Instead of being honest, Cigna leaders fabricate reasons for change and expect employees to accept their manufactured rationale unquestioningly. This only sows distrust among the company. Cigna is also constantly reorganizing. This creates confusion for managers and employees, especially when roles and responsibilities are unclear, resulting in workplace dysfunction. As such, unnecessary conflict arises among colleagues, breeding negativity and divisiveness. Lastly, I find Cigna’s strategy ambiguous. Strategy from the Enterprise and Senior Leadership Team is usually enigmatic. For example, when Cigna launched its Drive to 2025 initiative, they provided three pillars with a descriptive sentence for each: Grow, expand, strengthen. Clear, right? It’s almost as if Cigna opened a thesaurus and said, “These words will do. Now go forth and figure out how to implement.”

1.0
Jul 1, 2023

Did Elon Musk buy Cigna?

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

From my hiring point until June 2023, I could not say enough good things about the company and its culture: good raises, good bonuses, a lot of cultural awareness and inclusion. AWESOME people there.

Cons

Wow. I have worked here for years, fullt remote, receiving high praise and promotions. Suddenly, there is an initiative called "the future of work", which is forcing everyone into an office. When the entire company went remote for gthe pandemic, Cigna's numbers for improved productivity and lowered overhead were phenomenal. Now we are being told that remore work isn't getting the job done, and employees are missing opportunities to collaborate. The thing is, employees are scattered all around the country, and returning to an office will not cause you to be with colleagues...I will still conduct all my meetings over Webex. The way this is being implemented is draconian. Folks who live 100+ miles from an office are being told to either come in, apply for another position with Cigna, or leave. Yes, in those words. Further, the return to the office for 51% of your time is temporary...the goal is to have everyone in a office because "we have real estate we need to use". One guy said he was moving in 2 weeks to a further location, and the upper management response was...I kid you not..."you might want to rethink that move." I keep thinking this is a horrible nightmare and I will wake up. Cigna, what happened to you???? Will it be worth it when the talent walks out the door?

1.0
Jun 15, 2023

No longer a good company

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

For years I thought Cigna was a good company but the last 3-4 years things have changed and I no longer feel I will retire here. There has been a mass exodus of top talent and Band 4&5 leadership over the last year in particular. This is a Healthcare services company that does do some good. There are many jobs you will be able to find a passion for. Large company so there are always internal postings (however there is a minimum 1 year in role policy before you can transfer). After 10 years of employment you get 28 days PTO per year. Up to 5% 401k match. Some roles offer restricted stock grants as part of compensation package (vests after 3 years) but you must agree to a noncompete.

Cons

- Used to be a remote first company. In 2024 senior leadership has decided all positions are now in office aligned and is forcing people to go to an office or resign. People are now forced to commute for hours a day (without a cost of living offset) and senior leadership still expects the same productivity and results. - Senior leadership does not care about Human Resources - Used COVID as an excuse to not give employees raises in 2021 even though the company performed very well. - Implemented a mandatory COVID vaccine and then walked it back after forcing people to meet the policy deadline. - Minimal raises (2-3%) even if you are a top performer. Minimal promotion or internal transfer raises (2-6% common) - Maternity leave is terrible - No longer have sick leave - Minimal PTO until you have 10 years tenure - Constant restructuring and change - Removed company paid internet for WAH when still had WAH - Work/life balance- expect minimum 45-60 hours depending on role

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