Too many reorganizations and restructuring causing chaos and confusion - very internally focused company. - Anonymous employee Cardinal Health Employee Review

2.0
4 Feb 2011
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good pay with very good benefits. There are opportunities for promotions if you work for the right senior leaders, in the right geography.

Cons

Too many changes, and the loss of the McGaw Park employees and their knowledge was devastating to the company. There is very little work life balance for leaders or employees. The new HR structure put the workload on already overworked managers and supervisors. Cardinal Health wants to focus on their employees, but they don’t have the structure or leaders in place to make that philosophy a reality. Employees seem to be more and more disgruntled every year, and the changes coming in the next two years will only stretch the depleting resources of the company. Lean Six Sigma has been an excellent tool for the company, but is reducing jobs as the expected cost cutting is realized. There are a few excellent VP’s who are overworked and overloaded and cannot focus on developing the talent below them. There is a group of SVP's and VP's who have a “good ole boys” network that do not listen, and do not promote a positive environment. Unfortunately the good ole boys club stifles new ideas and innovation if you fall outside of their network.

Explore other reviews about Cardinal Health

5.0
28 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Flexibility. Great people to work with. Good PTO.

Cons

Minimal movement to move up within the company

2.0
15 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Good benefits - Easy training - They strive to understand how to get someone to their fullest potential

Cons

- No concrete track for promotion, to the point that it seemed impossible - They will not listen to their workers - Management on-site and higher up are very lazy - They will expect you to do the work that they schedule, even if it is impossible to complete - From the perspective of my role in quality control, it seemed impossible to make management, and also production in general, understand the time it takes for certain procedures and tests to be completed and reviewed. - Our entire site is getting shut down, and they are just now ramping up production to meet quotas and schedules. While, at the same time, keeping our severance estimations as vague as possible. - Low to no incentivization for anything

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