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BC-BS Provider in 14 states - Anonymous employee WellPoint Employee Review

3.0
31 Oct 2010
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Benefits are comprehensive and generally affordable to employees. Many rank-and-file employees and departmental managers have long tenure (15-30 years). 401(k) contributions receive a 100% match of the employee's first 6% payroll deduction, with full and immediate vesting (no deferred vesting over 5-7 years as has become so common in the past decade). Extensive training provided if necessary for the particular position. Work-at-home options for many positions.

Cons

Employees must choose from a very limited choice of medical plans, none particularly good -- ironic that our customers have far better options. Paid-time-off is skimpy, onlyt 18 days/year for the first 5 years, then 23 forever after -- this includes normal sick days (there are good STD and LTD benefits, however). Noticeable decline in employee morale over the past 2 years. In some position, company now emphasizes quantity over quality, and regularly requires excessive mandatory overtime. ***** Hyprocrisy reigns at the executive level -- two of Wellpoint's Core Values are "Integrity" and "Improving the Lives of the Communities We Serve". These communities include the Wellpoint employees, yet for cost reasons (read stockholders), whole groups of employees in various states have lost their jobs -- outsourced overseas!!! Some victims have many years tenure, some just shy of retirement, but corporate policy favors stockholder ROI over years of loyal service.

Explore other reviews about WellPoint

5.0
24 Aug 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great people to work for

Cons

Lots of hours. Ever changing.

3.0
7 Nov 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The company culture, people, and work environment are great. The pay and benefits are above average except they are skimpy with PTO.

Cons

The workload is insane. (I work in IT.) Projects are promised based on what will make the managers look good, not on what is realistic. We never have time to do anything right, so we frequently have to make time to do it over. And that time comes out of our personal lives, those of us who have managed to hang on to one at all. We knew going in it wasn't a 40 hour week, but it has gone from the occasional 45-50 hour week to 10 x 6 or 8 x 7 as the norm, and we are on salary. We get resources too late in the project to train them to be much good, and training them takes time away from the time we can spend doing everything because we have no time to train!

3
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