Spring Health Reviews

3.0

39% would recommend to a friend

(300 total reviews)
avatar

April Koh

42% approve of CEO

48% positive business outlook

Spring Health has an employee rating of 3.0 out of 5 stars, based on 300 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Spring Health employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Healthcare industry (3.4 stars).

Reviews by job title

300 reviews
3.0
16 Apr 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

My immediate teammates and managers were very amiable and responsive. They worked very hard to allow me flexibility with my schedule while balancing other life challenges.

Cons

Spring Health is a tech company first and foremost. In company-wide meetings, CEO April Koh would triumphantly state that she wants her company to become synonymous with mental health. When people think of therapy I want them to think of us, "like uber", she'd brag. What's lost in that attitude is that mental health and wellness is not a zero-sum game, and it never should be. By having company-growth, and not the wellness of your employees or your members, as your number one priority you're susceptible to following the rules and traditions of corporate America which have for so long been a leading conflict in the lives of so many workers. In my 3 years at the company I worked under 3 different managers and briefly under none at all. While my managers themselves were lovely, I saw less and less of them the longer I worked there. Their time being filled with an endless amount of meetings between their bosses and their underlings. The managers themselves seemed to be paid to pass along information from one circle to the next rather than to actually put pen to paper for effective change. Despite raising my voice on several occasions for the need to reform some of our work flows, there were significant tasks that were monotonous, arduous, and superfluous and impeded my team's ability to give vulnerable members the care they deserve. The burnout of myself and my teammates was regularly ignored in favor of never missing an interaction with a member. A year and a half into my full-time position my team was suddenly told that we would be required to work holidays moving forward. When I voiced my concern, I was told that other companies offer 365 coverage and so we had to too. I suggested that Spring Health break the mold and stand up for the health and well-being of their own employees instead, but my suggestion never made it past middle management. Perhaps company growth is more important than your employees having a healthy work-life balance. I was one of the first 10 people on the team, which is now 75+, and when I asked for a raise to reflect my significant contributions and my costs of living in NYC as a remote worker, I was denied. Although I've been with this company and this team since 2020, and have maintained excellent relationships with all of my coworkers, consistently knocked out my weekly KPIs, built out the work flow that much of the team still utilizes, trained more than half of the people on my team, worked holidays and overtime, and never missed a single day of work without advanced notice, I was fired for using my work computer for personal reasons in the privacy of my own home. I was hired to this position mid lockdown and have been utilizing my computer the same way for the past 3 years and it has never been an issue that's been noticed or more importantly impeded my work in any way. As a full time graduate student continuing my education in the mental health field while balancing this position, I've been required to use my computer for personal means. Perhaps if Spring Health had given me a raise that was reflective of the level of work and commitment that I gave to them, I could have bought myself a personal computer, but alas. I was given no warning, there was no conversation, I was just fired. In traditional tech company fashion I was logged out of every platform instantly following my firing and wasn't even given the opportunity to ask my managers for a reference or to say good bye to any of my teammates who I had worked with for 3 years. Imagine claiming to be a company that pioneers mental health and wellness while simultaneously firing one of your top performing employees without so much as a conversation. Mental health and wellness requires empathy and perspective. Providers are asked to approach each client with a curiosity to understand the fullness of their human experience. Spring Health has neither empathy nor curiosity. They're a tech company looking only at their potential for growth and how quickly they can get there from point A to point B. You know, "like uber".

1.0
4 Jan 2024

Terrible Leadership, Culture, and Values

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

You get to work with very smart people.

Cons

The culture is the worst I've experienced in my career. From the top leadership has set a culture of blame, manipulation, and fear. I've heard our Chief People Officer describe the justification why leadership wants names assigned to major initiatives as "April wants to know whose necks to strangle". You can see how this accepted way of speaking should raise alarms about Spring Health's culture. This is especially true since we are is a mental health company. This top down culture has created an environment where people look to point blame, manipulate, and gaslight others in an attempt to elevate themselves and avoid the repercussions of issues that might get associated back to them.

avatar
Spring Health Response
2y
Thank you for taking the time to share your personal experience. Though we usually devote our time and energy to analyzing employee feedback shared in our regular surveys and internal conversations, it is important that we reply here to 1) recognize our own growth opportunities as a company and 2) explicitly clarify the false attributions made about a member of our leadership team, as the quote provided here is completely inaccurate. Our company culture and employee experiences are a top priority at Spring Health; however, we also realize that we are not perfect and will continue to listen, learn, and invest in creating a culture in which our team members can thrive. Additionally, we have some work to do to reverse ingrained perceptions of blame at Spring Health. There is no question it starts with C-Suite. Our co-founders and entire executive team own this. For a company like ours whose mission is centered around the mental health of our millions of members, including our own team members, it’s essential for us to get this right. I encourage you to stop by our next Ask Me Anything, hosted by our CPO, so you can learn why performance and accountability matter to Spring Health, and how this will actually help to enhance our culture. Or, you can reach out to your People Business Partner – we’d appreciate the opportunity to better understand your experience and where blame and accountability are showing up. - Sr. Director of Employee Experience
3.0
2 Feb 2023

Work here at your own risk

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Everyone at this company is here because they deeply care about the mission. The employees deeply care about one another (perhaps it's trauma bonding) and really want to support you. Even working remotely, it's a tight-knit crew and everyone wants to see each other succeed. The pay is fairly competitive and was one of the things that drew me here initially.

Cons

What can I say that hasn't already been said in Business Insider or the other reviews? The company's mission has been weaponized and 'move fast to change lives' really means work as many hours as it takes for us to establish ourselves as the industry leader. They will not invest in hiring enough headcount to support all the accounts we have at the standard they expect and product is not churning out the promised updates or new features when they say they will. They hire incredibly bright and driven individuals and then burn them out rather than give them the resources needed to scale their teams. Data investments need to improve 10x, bless the tiny team that is trying to keep pace with the needs of our clients. Managers start out incredible but the model set by Sr. leadership ends up molding them all into fear-mongering, micro-managers. They will say you are just in a 'busy season' and then you look up and realize you've been working 13 hour days for about 5 months straight and this is just the norm. You will ask to adjust workload and they will gaslight you into thinking you just have poor time management. I know multiple people who have started taking anti-anxiety, anti-depressants, or ADHD meds since starting this job. Spring Health feels like it is constantly at war with itself, those who truly care about the mission and wanting to do right by folks, those who will double down to get us to the light at the end of the tunnel. Meanwhile the other half (ahem the board and c-level) are in a race to make money as fast as possible, regardless of whether it means they will contradict their own values or chew up great employees in the process.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 300 Reviews

Glassdoor has 448 Spring Health reviews submitted anonymously by Spring Health employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Spring Health is right for you.