HCS Healthcare Reviews

3.0

47% would recommend to a friend

(80 total reviews)

Debbie Scott

17% approve of CEO

44% positive business outlook

HCS Healthcare has an employee rating of 3.0 out of 5 stars, based on 80 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The HCS Healthcare employee rating is 22% below average for employers within the Human resources and staffing industry (3.8 stars).

Reviews by job title

80 reviews
2.0
12 Feb 2015

Oh these reviews...

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

For an entry level recruiting job, Scouts offers a fairly competitive starting salary. Additionally, there are probably 500 coffee/creamer/sweetener combinations! Drinking each combination is probably as interesting of a challenge as staying employed is! The biggest pro of HealthCare Scouts, which makes the cons all the sadder, is the wealth of talent in the building. While every organization simply has some who are better than others, the internal talent across the board is incredible. Scouts does read these reviews and takes them incredibly personally. Not enough to actually reflect on the negative things people say, but just enough to get angry by them and take that anger out on a room of people who didn't write them.

Cons

The organization is riddled with a constant stream of change, stress, and anxiety. So why the constant stream of change/stress/anxiety? Scouts suffers from an identity crisis, believing itself to be on the cusp of being a $100M company while not being within even $75M of that figure. The CEO believes recruiters are entirely mix-and-match, that anyone can turn any order into a financial windfall that lands largely in his pocket. The result is, shockingly, an entire workforce that feels like they don't matter. Beyond that, the CEO runs this organization by simply listening to the next newest person in the room. The previous President, who had built the company from start-up to successful start-up was ousted when a new COO was appointed who had a new set of ideas. Recently, a new COO has been appointed with a brand new set of ideas. There is no doubt that this cycle will continue and I think it is becoming more and more apparent. And maybe that isn't really anyone's fault, as the CEO routinely makes an appearance to....express his lack of satisfaction, no matter how good things are going. While the current President and COO are full of ideas, some of them not even that terrible, their lack of industry knowledge gives those ideas almost zero credibility. Recently the COO asked a question about a basic tenant of the organization's core focus that would have gotten a recruiter fired. Any real question from a recruiter is met with answers ranging from a runaround of old war stories from the days when "recruiters ran full desks" to words that don't make sense in the order they are arranged in. Recruiters are encouraged to voice their concerns, however, recently a meeting was held where all of those concerns had been written down and regurgitated back to us as weapons, not protected conversation like we were led to believe. The organization is constantly changing, which is fine, as change is a good thing. The only problem is the change is reactionary, haphazard, and poorly implemented. You cannot change something just to change it again 6 weeks later; you can't install someone in a position of leadership to sack them 6 weeks later, and you can't change something in January of 2014, change it 15 more times, and then return right back to where you started in January of 2015. The sad part about the culture is there is distrust literally everywhere. You have people at every level of the organization who listen out for information so they can rat out their co-workers to improve their positions in the eyes of leadership. It's sad because these "rats" might be 5% of the organization, so it's not everyone, but it's certainly enough. Beyond that, there isn't any job security to speak of, which is kind of scary if you are a mid-20s guy or gal and you are looking to establish a steady career in the industry, as recruiting is a pretty sweet way to make a buck if you can stand the tedium.

2.0
26 Jan 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

If you are in the inner circle and are given the good jobs and accounts to work on, and put in no less than 50 hours a week, then their is an opportunity to make decent money (70 - 100k a year)

Cons

First off, management wants to think they are running a Wolf of Wall Street/Boiler Room business setting. Which is an impossible image too live up to, but boy do they try. The president, I have never met a more two-faced person. I understand that putting on an act and leading an organization requires a certain degree of finesse, but I have never experience someone smiling in my face while planning to fire me within minutes after a conversation. If you want an idea oh how she is, Imagine Claire Underwood from House of Cards, now take away any real power, BAM! you now have the president of HealthCare Scouts. The other guy, Chuck, The COO, or whatever title they wanted to give him, is a nice enough guy, but for the life of me I can not figure out why he still has a job here. The decisions he makes walk a fine line between arbitrary and non-essential, yet he remains second in command. He will tell you the same 2 sales stories of him in his "glory days of recruiting, where running a full desk was the epitome of ALWAYS BE CLOSING/ATTENTION INTEREST DECISION ACTION" I guarantee within the third one-on-one conversation you have with him, he will tell you about the time he placed a bilingual case manager in Fargo, ND. by calling a doctor with the last name "Lopez" and asking him for a referral. Now, the main con, is that even if you are a top producer year after year after year, if you start to slip, and your margin starts to drop... They will drag you into the pit and publicly execute you're professional life within the organization (they fire you). There's no performance improvement plan, no warnings to step your game up. You start to slip, you are gone. ZERO job security. I guess the reason everything is the way that it is, is because of the CEO, Don. The thing about Don, is that he already owns a recruiting company, HealthCare Support, and the interesting this is, HealthCare Support is SOOOOOO much more successful than HealthCare Scouts. Scouts is the ugly step-sister to Scouts. Which means Don treats it as a business experiment. "hey, lets see if making them work from 7am - 7pm makes me more money" "I wonder if firing a quarter of the staff level employees makes them work harder." THESE ARE THINGS THAT HAPPEN AT THIS ORGANIZATION! This is not a job you would take if you are looking to start a career. This is a job you take if you have massive amounts of debt to pay of, and only want to work 24/7.

1.0
25 Apr 2016

For the Powerful Few, Not For you

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

When you first meet with the president, she will greet you with a big smile and energy that is through the roof. She will tell you this is a $100,000 job and will flaunt trips and cars and gift cards and you start think this is a place that really gets behind their employees. You couldn’t be further from the truth. DO NOT BE FOOLED. I am not saying she is lying, but the only people that make that kind of money and are privied to the trips and cars were given a very successful book of business. If you are new to the organization you will never get to see any of those perks which makes it almost worse than not having those things at all.

Cons

The jobs orders are stale and have been open for several months because the sales team does not sell. They blindly email resumes over and have little control over their clients. It takes over 40 subs to fill one job. More than half of their jobs close with no notice or reason and the fall off rate is well above average. It is a lot of effort for such a low success rate and you quickly realize they have no idea what they are doing. Most people end up cutting their losses and quitting which explains their unusually high turnover rate. The entire management team also has their favorites and if you are one of the powerful few, you get treated like a first class citizen. The rest of the daytime slaves (the recruiters) will work long hours, take few breaks few breaks, and will be under constant threat of losing their job. Short of standing in the front of the room beating on a giant drum and yelling “ROW” the president does the next best thing to increase productivity. She sends out an email just about every out to make sure you are on par for your sub count. It is so intrusive and disruptive, it is actually hard to focus on the task on hand i.e. getting people jobs! It is all about that sub and the president (a former beauty queen with no college degree) seems to care more about that number and the aesthetics of the office than actually making the company money. She has completely lost the respect of the floor and everyone is trying to keep their jobs long enough to solidify their exit strategy. Just being there on a day to day basis is depressing. The moral of the office is so low, I’ve seen cancer wards with more hope… you look around you see your buddies suffering, not a smile in the room other than nervous grins the recruiters give when the owner walks past their cubes. He will fire you if he doesn’t like the calendar on your desk. If you area an adult, which I think most people on this site are, do not work here. They don’t give you a shred of dignity and is impossible to make the kind of living you want. If you work 12 hour a day, and put in some time on the weekend, the best you can hope for is $60,000. It’s for the powerful few, not for you.

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Glassdoor has 86 HCS Healthcare reviews submitted anonymously by HCS Healthcare employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if HCS Healthcare is right for you.