ComPsych Reviews

4.0

73% would recommend to a friend

(852 total reviews)
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Paul Posey

84% approve of CEO

77% positive business outlook

ComPsych has an employee rating of 4.0 out of 5 stars, based on 852 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The ComPsych 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

852 reviews
1.0
24 Aug 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great hours, for my needs anyway. I worked 8:00am-4:30pm. You know, there is a surprisingly large amount of very sweet, genuinely caring, kind, and overall good people who are employed by CP, which is shocking because management treats everyone like flaming gutter garbage. Well, I was financially privileged enough to have been able to afford the excellent health insurance plan, 100% coverage on basically everything and you can see any doctor you want-- that deductible is around $2,500, by the way. I can only speak from my own experience, and HR seems to genuinely care about the employees-- you know, since the managers don't. For me, obtaining FMLA due to my own situation was fairly simple and HR staff helped me every step of the way. If you go and talk to them, generally they listen and have options available re: whatever your situation is. Managed care work is very interesting, to say the least. It's really one of the best benefits to learn from a counseling standpoint. Once I was there for a few months, I stopped caring about anything management said which was along the lines of quantity over quality. As such, I was able to do my job with the utmost quality and efficiency, while attributing the appropriate time my clients deserved. Never got praise for my work, but my clients were always grateful and to hear that you've helped someone out of darkness or realize hope is a humbling experience. Because of the many questionable policies and dubious ongoings at CP, you will realize fairly quickly that, despite intimidation tactics from managers, your job is never really at risk. All anyone can do is send you a passive-aggressive email with a smiley face.

Cons

LOL. I'm sure someone already warned about this, but at some point, you will be subjected to a very strange luncheon where you have to watch what's essentially a film promoting the CEO and how privileged he has been for his entire life. No, really. 1.) The Diversity and Inclusion Committee no longer exists for some strange, unexplained reason. I imagine it's because the CEO is a trump supporter, but what do I know? That should tell you a lot already if you're a member of ANY marginalized group. 2.) Speaking of, discrimination is alive and well here. Everyone knows it. No one says anything, because management doesn't care, and everyone knows that, too. Just ask anyone about that Chick-fil-A situation during Pride Month. 3.) Attendance policies and PTO don't make sense. PTO builds over time, and if you get sick, PTO will be used without your permission. No sick days exist. No vacation days either. You're supposed to get a certain number of days after a year, but that's not a thing. Regarding holiday time, management doesn't allow anyone to ask for time off for holidays until a week or two before whatever holiday it is. You have to fight with EVERYONE and it's basically The Hunger Games in real life. Managers are, of course, exempt from the lunacy. 4.) OH MANAGEMENT. Do not be fooled by "The Hype." As an employee, you are but a simple plebeian without a face, name, or number. At CP, you are a disembodied voice on the air, words forever lost to the annuls of history. You may as well not even exist. Managers are arrogant, rude, condescending, they are on a 24/7 power trip, they will use their power to abuse you and gaslight you to no end, and they will micro-manage you until you literally lose your mind. Managers will take you for granted, will be disrespectful, and apparently don't understand the concept of professionalism. They actually use the instant messaging system on the job to say horrible things about employees all day. The managers and director will never (EVER) have your back as an employee, even if it is the morally sound and legally correct thing to do. Speaking even further on micro-management, managers are actively watching your call times and after-call times, and one manager in particular will walk passed people to make sure they are working, or to make them get back on the phones. Remember, this is a job where you will talk to clients with very nuanced issues and risk/safety concerns, and those calls don't end in 10 minutes or less. Hope you aren't prone to anxiety. Really, no one in management cares about you at CP. Sure, they say they do, but just wait a couple weeks. *** As an aside, there is ONE manager who genuinely, genuinely cares about the employees. But unfortunately, the company doesn't care about employees' well-being, so this manager can't do much when issues arise (24/7). 5. ) No one is paid what they deserve for the work they do in this place, period. The client volume is out of control, and management cares more about numbers than about the quality of care of clients-- which is easily one of the top ultimate 'no-nos' of the mental health field. 6.) Some people get special privileges without any fathomable reason. There are trainings that really should be given to everyone (i.e., disaster relief), but management chooses to invite only certain people without any justification-- certainly not merit or seniority. 7.) The turnover rate at this company is deranged, it's a revolving door going 100 mph. Brings morale down when you don't know anyone, and the cubicle set-up only encourages cliques and isolation. Add to that ComPsych's transient policies, management's inability to recognize employees as human beings, and you have people cycling in and out very quickly-- some on their first day. And it's a shame, too, because a lot of great counselors and social workers end up leaving because of management's demonstrated incompetence. 8.) No opportunity for growth or advancement. There really isn't much more to say about that. Sometimes management will "create" new positions and try to "promote" employees without an official offer letter or contractual agreement. 9.) There is a seriously hard and immovable plateau for clinical skills that you'll hit it fairly quickly. Once you've hit that impenetrable ceiling, you may as well find a new job. 10.) Company culture? WHAT company culture? Values? Ridiculous notion. 11.) Hope you can unhinge your jaw and inhale your lunch because you only have 30 minutes. Some people have 15-minute breaks for some inexplicable reason. 12.) No one is used to this because many, many companies don't do this, but you do have to work on Martin Luther King, Jr. Day and President's Day. Also, you're not allowed to take days off in January. They say it's because of high call volumes, but over time, every month of the year has become busy, so........? 13.) Don't expect praise or recognition for anything. You will literally save multiple lives within a day without ever meeting your clients in person, but in CP world, that's just a Tuesday and no one cares because everyone's too busy making tasteless jokes about client-related suicides/suicidal behavior and/or decorating their cubes for weird contests. 14.) No matter how long you work here or how great you think it is in the beginning, an existential crisis of epic proportions is imminent. 15.) There a lot of serious and dangers ethical concerns surrounding dubious activity within CP. In a lot of cases, ethics are completely thrown out the window, I guess for the lolz. For instance, if you receive a child/elder abuse case, you are forced to transfer it to someone else in the company who will "maybe" decide to report it. Any mandated reporter knows this is illegal, and all of the employees are counselors or social workers.

1.0
7 Dec 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-Working from home was beneficial for a time. -The Team Leads are mostly tolerable when you prove to them you know your stuff, they stop micromanaging. -Part of the benefits included mental health counseling -If you asked with enough notice, it was easy enough to get time off approved. - Serving people who really needed an empathetic ear was gratifying. - It felt like a huge accomplishment to feel competent at my job, there was so much to remember and keep current on that being good at my job felt significant.

Cons

I hardly know where to start.... -My biggest issue is that ComPsych pretends to serve the clients (employees of various companies), but they mostly just use counseling as a means of manipulating/gaslighting people into staying at their terrible jobs. The corporation serves the interests of other corporations, it doesn't care about the people behind said organizations. People call in with serious issues at work and probably need to quit, instead we just direct them to a counselor and provide emotional support. -They advertise it as a "clinical triage and mental health" position but you're really just a phone operator who has to do extra de-escalation work. Over half of your calls will be people calling the wrong department, the wrong number, or not knowing what we offer for services. A lot of people call in looking for an instant mental health counselor or they want money, neither of those things are available through services provided. People will often be very upset, and you will spend most of your call level-setting. -The company culture is terrible, it's like they don't know the definition of mental wellbeing. You will spend countless hours providing emotional support to people and giving them solid wellness resources, and then ComPsych's HR will send an email out to staff about staying "well" and them emails are generic and offensively simple. You will give out better resources than you'll get from upper management. - The turnover is impressively bad. If you're lucky enough to get hired while teams are fully staffed, just wait a month. When the queues are short staffed, call volumes increase and it's an unsustainable disaster. It seems like half the teams are in training, so no one is ever fully on the same page. -People will be verbally abusive during calls at times. You will be treated like absolute trash by clients calling in. They are often having really hard times and are, understandably, emotional. Because they might have had a bad experience with us in the past or think we're beneath them, they will make demands of you like you're their stupid butler. Clients will demand you do things that are impossible. - The physical toll of being at a desk 40 hours a week cannot be understated -The emotional and psychological toll of constantly deescalating suicidal and homicidal people is not to be taken lightly. We are providing this support over the phone, so we are extremely limited (can't see facial expressions or physically intervene). - There are almost no opportunities for growth, career development or moving up in the company. Training is partially proficient at best and coaching is a joke. -If you have a bachelor's and work as a Guidance Specialist and then earn your master's and become a Guidance Consultant, the job gets significantly worse, and you'll make pennies extra. I would compare it to a silent promotion, expectations increase but most other things stay the same. - The company had a team who leaves fake reviews on Glassdoor to make the company seem better to work for. I have this information from a former supervisor. -Managers (Team Leads) aren't allowed to serve as references, so you might as well not work for years because you have nothing to show for it. - The pay is TERRIBLE for the workload. Not only was it a lot of emotional work, there was a lot of technology you had to master, and things are always changing. After working full-time for more than two years, I went $3, 127.45 into debt because I wasn't making enough to cover basic expenses. -I asked for information on taking a leave of absence for mental health purposes and I didn't get a response from HR for three weeks. When I put in my official notice of separation from the company, HR emailed me back in 4 hours with detailed instructions. They don't care about the people who work for the company, they just care about filling empty positions. -The CEO gets students fed to him from a psychology program in Chicago so he can work them hard and pay them poorly, under the guise of education. -The productivity expectations are unrealistic and offensive to the client. Trainers tell you to try and get the calls done in 5-9 minutes. That means that you're charting someone's information, doing an intake assessment, providing emotional support, getting them a counseling referral and making sure they don't need anything else. Sometimes people are suicidal or just lost a family member, not a good time to rush someone through a call. - The new phone system (in my opinion) was designed to micromanage and watch employees. They told everyone it was to improve services for clients, but it's not done that, and Team Leads are grilling folks during monthly check ins. -It's REALLY hard to work in such an intense field and then constantly have the fear that you'll be terminated for not meeting productivity. -The CEO does everything possible to cut corners. He pays his staff terribly and also pays the counselor he contracts with offensively low rates. This negatively impacts quality of services provided, but the company is doing great so who cares, right? -The CEO owns property in Trump Tower, if that tells you anything helpful. -"Professional development" is a joke. They basically expect you already have all the skills needed when you take the job and just make sure you're sort of trained on company-specific issues. -You might not find out about major changes or updates until the day they're happening. There is a great divide between upper management everyone else, most everyone is not trusted with information until its being rolled out. You can imagine how things go while you're actively training on a live call. -I am POSITIVE I'm not thinking of everything, but hopefully that gives you a snapshot. Just please don't work for ComPsych. Its not worth your mental health, your physical health or the health of your career.

1.0
28 Aug 2019

The worst. Ever.

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Location, there are some really wonderful people that work here.

Cons

Where do I begin? This place is plain awful. Do not work here if you value yourself. If you are desperate for work, go ahead, apply but have an exit plan available. For an EAP company, they treat their employees horribly. And then think people are so dumb to accept the gloss of possible gifts at Christmas as an acceptable trade-off for how you are treated daily. Potential and current customers mostly work in HR. If I were a customer, I’d never work with CP on any level because of how they treat people. Managers are on a power trip. Their own self importance keeps them from understanding how to run a team. They have zero training in how to manage people. People are seriously underpaid and the benefits are expensive and terrible. Those who brown nose get ahead. And it shows. Diversity? HA! They are afraid of it. Internally, they brag about having a diverse workforce, but if you look at it honestly, all of the “diversity” is concentrated in only a few areas and there are few diverse faces in senior management. But this place is so awful, I don’t blame people for not wanting to be bothered with working there at any level. The positive reviews you see? About 90% are fake, created by PR, HR or whoever to make CP look better. To those of you who took the time to read this because you are considering a job there? Look elsewhere. You will regret and dread your decision to work here. I know I do.

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Glassdoor has 878 ComPsych reviews submitted anonymously by ComPsych employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if ComPsych is right for you.