Culture Clashes as Company Adapts to New World - Anonymous employee Patterson Companies Employee Review

3.0
18 Jan 2017
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

• Relaxed atmosphere. • $3 lunches at Corp Office. • Fitness center at corp office. • Co-workers supportive of life events (ie. parties for birthdays, weddings, kids). • New talent is receptive to change, and has been a breath of fresh air.

Cons

• Stubborn, Old-School, Boys Club Management. • No maternity leave policy. Women are forced to use short term disability, meaning they receive 70% of their salary for 6 weeks. Unacceptable for a large company in 2017. • No paternity leave policy. • Many people talk behind others back when they decide to work from home. Bitterness from long-term employees exists. • Long-term employees pride themselves on not taking vacations, coming into the office during snowstorms rather than working from home. • Misiak, Guggenheim, and Anderson continue to receive millions each year as competitors pass them by. Patterson stock is trailing the Dow by 24% and Henry Schein’s by 100% over the past 5 years as of January 2017. • Salary for corp employees is consistently 10-15k less than market value. 2-3% annual raise is standard without consideration to individual performance. • Manufacturing 1920’s work attitude is heavily present here (time spent at your desk is more valued more than actual productivity). • Some people very resistant to change in the Corp office. • No 401k matching. Employee stock purchase plan requires you to remain with company for 6 years to be vested.

Explore other reviews about Patterson Companies

5.0
12 May 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great job and great people to work with

Cons

A lot of ongoing training for new products

4.0
15 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The company has amazing benefits and allows you to truly exercise your abilities as a leaders.

Cons

The strong salesforce-driven culture create a very hostile environment between leaders trying to do what is best for the company, and salespeople just thinking about their commission and paycheck.

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