Virta reviews

2.9

40% would recommend to a friend

(234 total reviews)

Sami Inkinen

66% approve of CEO

54% positive business outlook

Virta has an employee rating of 2.9 out of 5 stars, based on 234 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Virta 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

234 reviews
2.0
Nov 23, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- WFH - benefits - mission driven - tech is improving for members and care teams - most align with company values - company offsite - sense of connection even in a remote environment - moderately flexible schedule

Cons

Unfortunately, the coach team is greatly mismanaged by toxic and incompetent senior leaders who are protected by the COO. Growth: this is pretty non-existent on the coaching team. In the last year, the coaching team had doubled in size and only 4 coaches were moved into a management position. Coaches and managers are discouraged from applying to open roles or considered for promotions and then are offered no feedback or opportunity to grow to eventually be “qualified” to apply or promoted in the future. If guidance is given, it’s a loose and generic focus area that will eventually shift to be something else at the next conversation (if that conversation ever even happens). Even trying to move to a team outside of coaching is met with a lack of support and is becoming more and more of a rare occurrence. If you’re looking to grow beyond a senior health coach or the entry level health coach manager position, it’s best to move on from Virta. Transparency: this lacks across the board. Whether it be comp adjustments, change from hourly to salary, hiring, workflow updates, or any other type of change management, senior leaders have a strange relationship with the truth and it seems are afraid to trust their team to handle an honest answer. Most of the time the actual reason or need for the change ends up coming from HR, legal, operations, or someone on the coach team finds out and begins to share. It’s broken trust time and time again, where it feels that nothing can be taken at face value and made it clear that senior leadership has no trust or respect for the team they are leading. People first: this really only means something if you are part of the COO’s personal friend group. Coaches are micromanaged, metrics and goal posts move constantly. The team is begging for consistency when it comes to clarity and expectations, but these are constantly shifting depending on who you talk to. The senior management never seems to be on the same page, often each giving different expectations and areas of focus for the coach team in meetings or 1:1 conversations, which bleeds down to managers who are constantly switching team focuses and it creates a lot of confusion, especially as the coach team continues to rapidly grow. This all leads to an unclear standard that anyone below senior management is held to and it seems that once you’re on the “inner circle”, you are no longer accountable for your actions or the negative feedback given about you. This had been proven time and time again where poor leaders are rewarded with a promotion or moved into their dream role. Virta used to be an exciting and great place to work, but the rapid growth and a lack of accountability or personal growth within the skills of leadership on the coaching team has really sent things south. The coach team has been screaming into the void that is the engagement survey, feedback shared with leaders at Virta, and publicly posting that things need to improve and it seems that Virta is more concerned with protecting their “inner circle” than doing what is right for the company and following through on the values they so proudly post.

5.0
Nov 14, 2024

Great Place to Work

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Been here going on 6 years. Great mission, great benefits, great career choices to move up the ranks.

Cons

Be a little more open door throughout the entire company.

2.0
Nov 8, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Good benefits. Health insurance offerings are great, but be wary of "unlimited" PTO. It is no longer unlimited, but they are still advertising it as such to new hires. It is "flexible", which basically means it's up to the discretion of your manager if they will approve PTO, and you have a 4 week limit that they are adhering to now. They are also now adding in limitations to when you are able to request PTO. - Retreats are fun! - Good people here on the individual contributor level. - Admirable mission. Although this has shifted somewhat very recently - still trying to help folks with Type 2 Diabetes, but also jumping on the GLP-1 bandwagon and "adjusting" their priorities accordingly. - Fully remote - there is (at least as of now) no expectation to move into the office. Denver & San Fran are really the only places they could enforce that, even if they did change this! - You will get all of your equipment and there are stipends for Learning & Development, home internet, and working from home (can use for office setup etc) - 4 week sabbatical available after 5 years with the company - Pretty good parental leave options

Cons

- A lot of people quitting, quiet quitting, and being let go lately (very unceremoniously I might add). Many of the upper level execs and people who have been with Virta since the beginning stages are bowing out- I'd take that as a sign - The culture seems really great! Until it isn't anymore. I was drinking the Kool-aid for some time, but realized as time passed that this company really only gives the illusion of caring about its employees. They will say all the "right" things, boast about how supportive they are, and gush about what great team members they have, but in the end, this seems to be just a way to keep stringing people along, making them feel good, and allowing them to add on more restrictions or responsibilities without much push back. - Diversity is not valued here. The company refuses to allocate budget for the DEI employee resource group, despite being asked many times. Again, a lot of "show" without much "tell". Numbers are a bit skewed when looking at the overall DEI report, because it doesn't take into account the positions held or departmental info. So in reality, almost all BIPOC are in the lowest rungs of the company, and many of the BIPOC who are higher-up will still very much stick to the status quo and try not to make any waves. - Bonus structures change every single quarter, and are almost never reasonable or equitable. For instance - using a bell curve to evaluate bonuses for a team of less than 15, so half of the team got less than 100% of the bonus, despite everyone on the team far exceeding the metrics for the quarter and having "the best quarter of enrollment so far!" Makes for very demotivating work and hits to morale. Especially when this team is probably the lowest paid in the entire company. - The pay is low. Maybe better if you're in a lower cost of living area, but I do think they pay less anyways, if that's the case. Bonuses make the salary manageable, but again, are not consistent and rarely capture the complexity of the role and only paint a partial picture of your performance. - Managers are not receptive to feedback. In several years working here, I and my teammates made MANY requests that were never followed up on or realized, and any negative feedback seems to be met with excuses and then disappear into the ether. - CEO needs some media training or sensitivity training. He's a funny guy and tries to keep things light, but sometimes says very inappropriate things or says things in a "sarcastic" way that comes off wrong. - Everyone in CSuite is going to be as "politically correct" as possible and this often means talking around things, not addressing issues or tackling them head-on, and a LOT of "fake" positivity, once you see through the facade. - High turnover. Lots and lots of folks leaving for better things consistently throughout my time here. And again, many people quiet quitting or being let go without a performance improvement plan or any official warnings. - Employees are very overwhelmed in all departments. Clinicans have thousands of patients to care for. Health Coaches have hundreds on their panels, all requiring personalized attention. Enrollment Advisors have thousands of applicants each to contend with. Engineers and Product are swamped with requests for changes and limited time and resources to implement them. Growth is good, but not at the expense of your employees. - Limited room for growth. If you are in health, there may be some room for this. If you are not in health, the only other option is management (which is more hours, way more expectations, and often only a few K more than being an IC). - There are CONSTANT problems. They talk about change, and pivoting, and adaptability, and being a team player a lot. But much of this is a direct result of the product not being ready, haphazard "solutions", shoddy infrastructure, and ramshackle ways of addressing problems. Consistent bugs, unexpected rollouts, and makeshift Google sheets or workarounds are a hallmark of working here. Many many "quick fixes" that end up being semi-permanent solutions and cause lack of efficiency and extra workload for team members. Things very often feel chaotic, up in the air, and out of control. Efficiency is very low, especially in the enrollment team, and team members are made to do loads of extra work because their systems do not talk to each other or products are not prepared for what is required of a complex health tech enrollment process. - Overall, at the end of the day, this company does not care about its employees. It has become more and more obvious that they mostly care about their bottom line, making profits, and doing whatever it takes (even if that means overworking people, piling on responsibilities, pushing forward with projects before they are ready, or eliminating any kind of dissenting voice).

Viewing 67 - 69 of 234 Reviews

Glassdoor has 244 Virta reviews submitted anonymously by Virta employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Virta is right for you.