Cannot Recommend at This Time - Anonymous employee GlobalHealth Employee Review

2.0
3 Aug 2018
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-Great work life balance for non managers. -Health insurance, FSA, decent food options near location at Oklahoma Tower. -Beautiful view from the 28th and 29th floors, if you are sitting near a window.

Cons

-Poor communication from the CEO down. -Salary, PTO policy, and holiday bonuses are not competitive. -Middle management and higher does not have a good work/life balance. -Unwilling to staff departments appropriately. -High turnover. -No training department, training is offloaded onto middle management and normal employees creating a heavier workload for current employees. -New office space is a shared work environment. Unless you are a manager, you will not have your own office. This makes it quite difficult to focus on your work and also seems to have reduced productivity due to more conversations taking place. -Small break rooms -Small number of restrooms, not always an issue. -Chat program is a hindrance more often than not -Management not held accountable for their mistakes. -It is rare for management to own up to let alone apologize for their mistakes. -Many of the leaders in my department are incompetent to an embarrassing degree.

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5.0
4 Dec 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Supportive management and supportive teams Fast paced environment

Cons

Fast paced environment and always busy

2.0
26 Jul 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Potential Pros of Micromanagement: Ensures accuracy in high-risk tasks where mistakes are costly. Provides clear direction for new or inexperienced employees. Maintains tight deadlines by closely monitoring progress. Prevents major errors in highly regulated industries. Offers quick feedback, helping some employees improve faster. (But long-term, it often backfires by stifling autonomy and trust.)

Cons

Micromanagement destroys trust, kills creativity, and crushes morale. Employees who are constantly monitored feel undervalued and disengaged, leading to frustration, burnout, and higher turnover. Instead of fostering growth, micromanagers create a culture of fear and dependency, stifling productivity and innovation. Key Problems with Micromanagement: Demotivates employees – People perform worse under excessive control. Increases turnover – Top talent leaves when they aren’t trusted. Hinders innovation – Employees stop taking initiative. Damages company culture – Resentment builds, collaboration suffers. Companies that empower their teams with autonomy see better performance and employee satisfaction. Micromanagement, on the other hand, is a major red flag for job seekers—it signals poor leadership and a stressful work environment.

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