Pros
• The company’s mission — helping people live independently — is genuinely meaningful. There are employees and leaders who care deeply and give everything they have to make that mission real. • The CEO truly has a good heart and a sincere vision for positive impact. Unfortunately, that intent often gets lost in translation as it moves down the leadership chain. • Front-line and mid-level teams tend to be supportive of one another; many operate like close-knit families trying to do the right thing despite the chaos above them. • You’ll gain resilience, adaptability, and an understanding of how large-scale healthcare operations function — useful experience no matter where you go next.
Cons
• Organizational alignment is lacking. Initiatives are launched without clear ownership, accountability, or follow-through, creating constant churn and frustration. • Some individuals in upper and mid-management positions execute directives without empathy or context, undermining the CEO’s vision and employee morale. • Communication between departments is inconsistent and often political, leading to confusion, duplicated work, and misplaced blame. • HR’s neutrality is questionable — outcomes can feel pre-determined rather than based on fair investigation or performance facts. • Constructive feedback is often met defensively instead of being used for improvement. Initiative can backfire if it challenges existing power dynamics.