Constant employee turnover - Anonymous employee OrthoFX Employee Review

2.0
11 Nov 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Flexible schedule and collaborative teammates (when they stay)

Cons

Most employees are there less than a year or even six months. Poor leadership and turnover of leadership. Shipping issues which creates products being delayed to customers which makes it hard to retain customers and bring on new customers. Benefits are decent, but they don’t match 401(k). The CEO Glassdoor is asking for a rating of isn’t even at the company anymore.

Explore other reviews about OrthoFX

5.0
10 Jul 2023
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Product and service model that is differentiated, great comp, good working relationships, supportive management

Cons

Low brand awareness and needs more investment

1.0
19 Mar 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

A true differentiator of an aligner. Was recruited for this position but was told by friends in the industry to run away…fast. Ended up joining the company due to the aligner being a true game changer and the latest VP of sales seeming like a straight shooter and someone you’d like to work for. I still think Jon is that guy, but not under this executive team.

Cons

- Leadership on the executive level is a problem. Too many try to lead instead of collaborate for the greater good. Latest sales leader tried his best but it’s clear he’s being leashed due to their short sighted aspirations. - Dysfunctional directives when it comes to sales strategy. Sales VP wants to create organic relationships with ortho’s to show how the aligner differentiates itself from legacy brands. Leadership seemingly doesn’t like the length of the sales cycle to win over orthos. This leads employees to wonder what the actual goal is when both sides are describing their ideal solution. - Employee churn is insane. The top level leadership simply think replacing is a solution instead of leaning into training/developement. This leads to distrust amongst doctors and offices. Leadership gave 4 employees roughly 2.5 months post training before letting them go. - Manufacturing lag times were a huge headache. This was starting to improve but was a struggle to shake that notion from orthos. - The latest sales leader means well and is doing their best to institute the right ingredients to make things run smoothly. Unfortunately, I’m not sure leadership will give him the time to see that through. When you’re hiring “your own people” then firing them within three months, how much trust does leadership have in you?

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