Root Whole Body Reviews

2.4

24% would recommend to a friend

(40 total reviews)

Pat Johnson

20% approve of CEO

24% positive business outlook

Root Whole Body has an employee rating of 2.4 out of 5 stars, based on 40 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Root Whole Body employee rating is 30% below average for employers within the Healthcare industry (3.4 stars).

Reviews by job title

40 reviews
1.0
18 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Nothing, This place is a nightmare, and the CEO is a manipulative, narcissistic bully.

Cons

In July 2025, I came into the role of Marketing Manager at Root Whole Body with excitement, enthusiasm, big goals, and a hopeful attitude toward the future. I recognized immediately that the marketing situation at Root was wildly misrepresented and needed an immense amount of work and reorganization. I made my opinion on the matter very clear to leadership at the time and many times thereafter. They were in agreement. However, it became abundantly clear within the first week that leadership had zero interest in setting me up for success in this new role, and I was dealing with a pure sink-or-swim mentality. I received zero onboarding, training, support, or structure, and was totally on my own. Plus, I was tasked with hiring and onboarding a social media content creator on top of getting up to speed myself. Despite this, I dug right in and put in long hours and weekends for the first couple of months, resolving many outstanding issues and chipping away at the mountainous task list. However, an ongoing culture of disrespect, bullying, and a pathological avoidance of responsibility, in addition to wildly unrealistic expectations for the role, slowly eroded my attitude and outlook. During my 90-day review, I discussed all of the above concerns along with many new concerns, including mercurial decision-making, childish misdirection, contradictory feedback, and constant belittling from the CEO. Her only suggestion was to establish boundaries. So, I moved forward, establishing boundaries, including processes and SOPs for myself and my subordinate. However, these boundaries were largely ignored, and I was treated with increasing hostility. Leadership began talking down to and bullying me so severely in public meetings that other employees began asking if I was ok and commenting that they almost walked out of the meeting in solidarity afterward. Plus, leadership talked poorly (and unfairly) about other employees, both terminated and current, when they weren't in attendance to defend themselves. On top of all of that, I (and others) have been criminally underpaid for the level and volume of work we’re doing and have been expected to vet, interview, and train new hires who came in at significantly higher salaries than I. This has by far been the most hostile and toxic work environment I have ever experienced, and they should be ashamed of their behavior and the treatment of their employees. I had hoped it was just my high expectations, but the 17 poor Glassdoor reviews that echo my experience and sentiment paint a different picture. The CEO, Pat Johnson, is intentionally cruel and then feigns ignorance about why she can't retain staff or customers. She's built a facade of wellness and hope on the backs of emotionally degraded and burnt-out employees. It's an absolute miracle that they haven't driven this business straight into bankruptcy already, but I imagine they'll get there eventually. I would say I wish them the best, but that would be a lie. Root Whole Body and Pat Johnson, you disgust me.

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Root Whole Body Response
1w
The most trustworthy perspectives often include some degree of self-reflection. We take all employee feedback seriously, especially when it’s difficult to hear. While we may not agree with every characterization in this review, we recognize that each person’s experience is their own. Maintaining a workplace grounded in respect, accountability, and productive dialogue takes daily effort, and we remain committed to that work.
1.0
28 Aug 2025

Burned Out by a Wellness Brand

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

You can see that the team is full of hardworking, mission-driven professionals who truly want to do right by the clients. Despite the MANY challenges, they are putting in consistent effort to keep things moving forward.

Cons

As a healthcare worker, it's been difficult — and honestly disheartening — to watch how the managers have been treated here and how those dynamics are affecting the rest of us. The CEO believes she has a winning formula, but it's clearly not working. Her constant interference in day-to-day operations creates confusion and instability, undermines each of her managers’ authority, and it’s something everyone in the organization can see — except the owner. There seems to be zero awareness (or care) of how this leadership style is contributing to the team's low morale and burnout - and affecting every one of the team members: providers, support staff, and the managers themselves. There are many factors contributing to why the business is failing, but the hostile work environment and relentless micro-managing are going to be the nail in the coffin. The owner has created an atmosphere of fear and retribution. There’s a lack of transparency, manipulative behavior, and a pattern of firing or driving away the very people who were holding everything together. These decisions have taken a serious toll — not just on leadership, but on the rest of us trying to provide care in a chaotic and demoralizing environment. This toxic environment not only breeds distrust and competition — turning managers against each other instead of fostering collaboration — but also creates a culture of “yes men,” where no one feels safe being honest. Since the owner is allowed to behave this way, engagement has dropped, morale tanked — and even those who care deeply about this work — are quietly looking for a way out. Honest communication has dried up because everyone is too afraid to speak up or challenge the status quo. It becomes a choice between putting up with it or being pushed out. Decisions keep getting stuck at the top, mistakes pile up, and everything feels like it's held together by duct tape and overworked people. The whole company ends up stuck in this cycle of dysfunction with no clear way out. The irony is that this is supposed to be a wellness organization — yet the very people doing the work are overextended, unsupported, and overwhelmed. “Support” and “balance” are big buzzwords here — but in reality? You’re drowning in work, playing 3 different roles, and getting zero help. It’s exhausting to witness — and even more exhausting to live through. And if you try to set a boundary or ask for help? Suddenly you’re on a performance improvement plan. At this point, that’s become the company’s not-so-subtle way of signaling it's time for you to leave. Once someone falls out of favor, the tone shifts: communication turns harsh, criticism becomes public in team meetings, and people are gaslit into thinking the problem is them. Yes, healthcare is a business — no one is denying that — but when everything is about numbers and blame, and no accountability is held at the top, it creates a culture where people can’t succeed. And it’s no mystery why people are thinking about leaving.

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Root Whole Body Response
7mo
This review is not authentic. We wish its author peace. We invite you to “trust and verify” by speaking with our dedicated team and providers, who have been with Root for 8, 12, and 2 years.
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Glassdoor has 41 Root Whole Body reviews submitted anonymously by Root Whole Body employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Root Whole Body is right for you.