Steer clear of this company. It's a mess. - UI Developer PracticeTek Employee Review

1.0
23 Mar 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Work from home is a true blessing here. No commute stress, flexible hours to fit life around work, and the freedom to create your perfect setup. Team members are genuinely great too: supportive, collaborative, and fun to work with, making even tough days bearable. These are the only bright spots in an otherwise flawed company, but they're enough to make it worth sticking around if you value those perks.

Cons

Management has no clue, especially the US HR folks who treat people like they don't matter. They won't help if you're burning out or falling behind. No real help, no one listens, just a bunch of empty words that mean nothing. Want to learn something new or get better at your job? Good luck with that. They make you use old tech and messy code from years ago. It's super slow, keeps crashing, and breaks all the time. Feels like using a rock to do a hammer's job while everyone else has better tools. When you try to leave, it's a nightmare. They take forever to give you basic papers like experience letters, last pay slips, or relieving notes. Weeks or months go by with silly excuses like system problems or policy stuff. It's easy for them but turns into a big headache for you right when you need those papers for your next job. Rules change out of nowhere, nobody cares about your ideas, and problems just pile up with no fixes. Team meetings? Forget solving anything. It's all about pointing fingers at each other instead of fixing what's wrong up top. New to work or got years of experience? Doesn't matter. Get out while you can. This place will kill your drive, waste your good years, and leave you angry with bad references and nothing but their weak excuses.

Explore other reviews about PracticeTek

5.0
2 Feb 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Unlike companies built around clicks, ads, or keeping eyelids glued on screens, our products do the opposite- and aim to decrease the amount of time healthcare practitioners spend on their keyboards. Even better, retail healthcare means most of our customers are also business owners. Supporting them means helping someone grow and build a business, and carve out their own place in the world while also serving their community. Beyond the mission, the leadership is exceptional. They are sharp, collaborative, transparent, and approachable, all while engendering a high standard of performance.

Cons

We are growing, integrating products, establishing new processes, and evolving every day. Change is the only constant. If you don't like change, and a good Friends "pivot" joke, it won't be the place for you!

1.0
11 Nov 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Talented mid-level employees who genuinely care about doing great work. Many colleagues were smart, passionate, and tried to make the best of an impossible structure.

Cons

PracticeTek embodies the worst traits of private equity ownership. The company continually hires expensive outside consultants while ignoring the talent already on payroll. Leadership pours money into enterprise-level systems at the behest of meddling board members that make no sense for a portfolio of small SMB products, most of which are twenty years old and patched together. The CEO runs on emotion, in an echo chamber of advisors who reinforce bad decisions, is cutthroat and performative, rewarding slide decks and endless meetings instead of execution or impact. Turnover at critical positions is constant, with each “reset” costing momentum and morale. In the last 2 years alone, there have been 4 CTOs...at a retail healthcare SOFTWARE company. If that doesn't provide a point of concern, what will? The company remains archaically sales-driven, clinging to outdated processes instead of embracing technology or customer-centric thinking. Something as simple as requesting a demo still requires confirming whether you’re already a customer, which perfectly illustrates their resistance to change. Products are outdated and nickel-and-dime customers instead of delivering true innovation. The result is a cycle of busywork, PowerPoint theater, and leadership chasing their own tails while the business erodes beneath them. It also doesn't help that senior leaders of "priority brands" are lavished with Disneyland off-sites, while most employees are trying to keep the lights on.

6
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