Pros
Some interesting and genuine people.
Cons
A typical day at work is overextending yourself to the point of mental exhaustion under the guise that you're treated fairly. You soon realize that you're nothing more than a means to an end for higher-ups within the business to make million-dollar salaries. Their patronizing attitudes and emails worded verbatim with "you should be thankful for your job", in order to sway you from the idea forming in your head that you are not paid or treated fairly is disgusting. You learn a lot about yourself working within a company like this, and usually, it's to realize they are the exact type of organizations who have driven healthcare into a dark place everyone wants out of. Including providers. Management might be nice as people, but as managers, they're just another tool to hire and fire based on financial gain for the top leaders of the organization. Workplace culture is non-existant because everyone is burned out. Is that a culture? Probably. The hardest part of the job is the therapy you end up needing, and second-guessing your entire career choice that goes hand in hand with working here. I would say the most enjoyable part of the job was a select few of the providers who are interesting and genuine people, however, it's typically short-lived and when they are first on-boarding because they still have a soul at that point. I would recommend working here if you can tolerate a quick 12 months for your resume. Unfortunately, long-term in this company would appear to be a miserable, taxing, empty road.