PRIDE Global Reviews

3.2

49% would recommend to a friend

(125 total reviews)

Leo Russell

46% approve of CEO

50% positive business outlook

PRIDE Global has an employee rating of 3.2 out of 5 stars, based on 125 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The PRIDE Global employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Human resources and staffing industry (3.8 stars).

Reviews by job title

125 reviews
4.0
6 Aug 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Flexible and friendly Easy work environment

Cons

Long 12 hour shifts, but not to intense

1.0
21 Aug 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Will help you to get your foot in the door to the professional world. You'll learn how to operate in a really dysfunctional environment which will make you appreciate a healthy workspace more fully.

Cons

I worked in the Pride Health division, which is a subsidiary of Pride Global. I had dealt with management from both the Pride Health and Pride Global divisions so I think it’s important to post this review on both pages. Management (including C-Suite) likes to walk the tightrope on what is legal and has absolutely no qualms about being unethical. For example: a senior director instructed my team to violate NYS labor law (in writing). This was in regards to LAB § 201-b (employers cannot make prospective employees pay for the cost of pre-employment medical exams as a condition of employment). Even though this individual was heavily involved in the creation of the policy, they tried to have my team violate it behind my back. Of course, I was immediately notified. After reminding him of the law, he suggested that my team should just “heavily suggest” that the prospective employees use their own insurance and medical provider. This issue was relayed to the legal department, who agreed our policy was in line with the law and his instructions were not, but nothing further came of it. Another example, we spent about a year updating our policies and procedures with the goal of obtaining JCAHO certification. After a successful audit, where we received praise from our auditor on our commitment to quality, leadership immediately began dismantling our standards. The ink was barely dry on the certificate before they started demanding policies and procedures be loosened. The straw that broke the camel's back for me was the elimination of the drug testing requirement for direct patient care employees (nurses, CNA’s, PCA’s etc). The reasoning leadership gave for the removal of the requirement was that it was not legally required and they didn’t want to pay for it. They were not interested in providing the highest quality of care givers, they only wanted to fulfill the bare minimum legal requirement. I spent a lot of time fighting for this to change to not happen, and ultimately failed. When I asked them if they would want the individuals caring for the health and wellbeing of the family members or children to be drug tested even if it wasn’t legally required they said yes, but did not feel we should have to “carry the burden of the cost”. Shortly after the drug test requirement was removed, a recruiter moved forward with rehiring a candidate who had recently failed their pre-employment drug screen by testing positive for methadone. Their reasoning was “they don’t need to pass a drug test anymore”. Leadership was notified, they were okay with moving forward as long as it was not technically illegal. This person would have been employed in a home for adults with disabilities taking care of the residents day to day needs. Leadership saw no issue with that. However- I left before the employment process was completed so I am not sure if that person ever went to work for the company. After sending in my resignation letter, my direct supervisor told me that if I kept up the habit of quitting jobs when my morals and ethics didn’t align with theirs, I would never make it in the corporate world. I think he meant it as an insult or a warning, but for me it was a revelation. I probably won’t ever make it in a place where profit is the most important factor. So for that, I can say thank you.

1.0
27 Jun 2019

Extremely toxic environment!

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Absolutely NONE. If you’re considering working for this scam of a company, then do yourself, your mental health, and your self-worth a favor, and RUN!

Cons

This is the most toxic, belittling, and mentally exhausting place to work. They will work you to your very core, for embarrassingly low pay. If you’re not their shining Talent Acquisition specialist bringing them visible revenue, then you are worthless to them, despite how important your contribution is behind the scenes as Operations, HR, Marketing, Compliance, etc. The CEO acts like a King of his kingdom, and only his narcissistic opinion matters. The specially made paintings of Napoleon Bonaparte with the CEO’s face on them, hanging on office walls, say it all. You are told to speak up because they so-called “value your feedback”, but will immediately call you out at the mandatory weekly meeting, or just fire you. You are mandated to participate in all of their nonsense events and do it with a smile, because if you don’t then you don’t have any “team spirit”. This is their way of masking the terribly toxic environment with “oh look how fun we are” events. The obnoxiously loud music, Friday happy hours, and free snacks will never make up for all the core values that are lacking! The level of rumors in this place is exhausting. Everyone is at each other’s throats. The worst politics of any firm that I have ever worked for, obscene favoritism, and destructive behavior of “leadership”. As far as integrity goes, there is none. Documentation forgery is coined as “arts and crafts” and is easily overlooked if that means more revenue for the company. In my almost 2 years with this firm, I have witnessed more turnover than I ever thought possible. More people have quit this place than I can even count. What’s is “AIKIDO”, you might ask? Well, it’s one of their many completely bogus, made-up concepts that everyone has to abide by. If you don’t go to a stupid event, you’re not acting in accordance with AIKIDO. If you have your own opinion, also against AIKIDO. If you’re called on during the weekly meeting and you don’t know what all the letters in AIKIDO stand for, well then be prepared to feel like garbage. Everything they created is absolutely fake and meaningless, with very little constructive reasoning behind it. Lastly, people in leadership positions simply do not and cannot act like leadership. They do it know what it takes to have integrity, loyalty to their subordinates, and earn the trust of others. If these reasons are not enough for you to walk away from your offer, then enjoy having to sing in front of everyone at the mandatory weekly meeting, on your very first day. Yes, you heard that right, good luck!

Viewing 1 - 3 of 125 Reviews

Glassdoor has 160 PRIDE Global reviews submitted anonymously by PRIDE Global employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if PRIDE Global is right for you.