Racist Culture and Toxic Environment with Zero Work-Life Balance - Sales Manager BP Healthcare Employee Review

1.0
13 Aug 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-Fantastic Work-Life Balance: You'll find it’s practically nonexistent! Who needs days off when you can work 24/7? -Opportunities for Growth: Especially in learning how to navigate office politics and survive without any support! -Fantastic Office Perks: Enjoy the free coffee as you contemplate the lack of vacation days and endless stress!

Cons

-Management Support: Available as long as you don’t need anything important. -Vacation Days: Practically non-existent, but who needs time off when work is life? If you dare to apply for Annual Leave, brace yourself for rejection. But don’t worry—your Unpaid Leave request will be approved in a flash! And if they buy back your Annual Leave, expect payments in 10-month installments. But beware: tender your resignation, and that payback magically disappears. -Management Support: Always ready to offer help when you’re handed a new task, but when you hit a snag, they vanish like magic. Of course, they’ll reappear—just in time to blame you for not getting the job done! -Career Advancement: The ladder here is more like a treadmill—lots of movement, no actual progress. Only Type-C employees seem to climb it. If you’re Type-I or Type-M, prepare for a career plateau and a lower salary. The management isn’t exactly known for equal opportunity. -Leadership: Ah, the "leaders." They proudly wear the title but seem to believe that leading involves blaming managers for sales drops caused by their own brilliant decisions. Guidance? Teaching? Not their style. They prefer to delegate—or rather, push tasks onto others—while sitting back and waiting for someone to spoon-feed them information. Even if the details are sitting in their inbox, they’ll still expect you to deliver them like you’re feeding a baby. -Working Hours: Expectation: 8 to 5. Reality: 24/7. After 5pm, your phone is your new best friend, and heaven forbid you don’t answer it! They’ll wonder why you’re not picking up, only to hit you with something that could easily wait until the next day. And don’t even think about taking a day off. If you do, prepare for a grilling on why you’re off on a weekday and get ready for a fresh pile of tasks. Funeral? Personal emergency? They couldn’t care less—work comes first! Plus, forget about overtime pay. Whether you’re stuck working late during a renovation or pulling a full day on the weekend, management couldn’t be less concerned about your unpaid extra hours. You stay as long as they need you, and your time? Not their problem! -Expectations: You’re expected to be a walking encyclopedia the moment you join or get promoted. If you don’t know something? Well, that’s your problem—guidance is a luxury you won’t find here. Meanwhile, the "leaders" who’ve been sitting in their comfy chairs for ages seem to know less than you do. They’re pros at using their mouths, but their brains? Not so much. -Sales Pressure: They’ll push you relentlessly to boost sales, but don’t expect any real help. Sure, they’ll throw some product knowledge at you during a CME, but selling techniques? -Communication skills? Not on their agenda. Knowing all the features of the product doesn’t mean you can sell it to a customer, but somehow, that’s your responsibility too. And when sales drop, guess who gets blamed? Not them, of course! -Crisis Management: When the lab runs out of essential supplies like blood tubes and test reagents, you can count on management to... completely disappear. They’ll dive deep into hiding when branches start asking questions. The result? Clinics stop using the service, and sales take a nosedive. But don’t worry—management will eventually resurface, days later, pretending they had no idea what was going on. Naturally, they’ll blame you for not finding sales and causing the drop, conveniently forgetting their own role in the disaster. Truly, a masterclass in dodging responsibility! -Salary: Start with a low salary and brace yourself for the grand promise of a raise after confirmation—expect a whopping RM50-RM200. Perfectly designed to make you feel like you're making a dent in the cost of living! Meanwhile, they gripe about rising reagent costs but seem blissfully unaware that staff salaries haven’t budged, leading to a high turnover rate. And when staff do resign, the manager gets a stern talking-to for not treating them well. Classic!

Explore other reviews about BP Healthcare

1.0
7 Jan 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Honestly and sincerely nothing great at all to say about this company.

Cons

No epf/socso/income tax payment You will end up paying a heavy tax from your pocket by the time of assessment. Take it as locum job as you will be only paid on the days you work. Expect that You can be terminated/relocated to other state the next day or less than 24 hours. No job security zero staff benefit. No progress of career. Day in and out the same thing. Expect to work at least 5.5 days a week including public holidays Bosses and the chronic chief medical officer in klang valley favour favoritism and pro of their race. No professionalism. You can get yelled and scolded by the owner in front of everyone on his moody days. Management sucks big time. You will find yourself lost when talking to HR or account as the management doesn't know their job scope.

4
1.0
11 Jun 2026
Anonymous contractor
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Colleagues are helpful since we're all just surviving here.. literally on survival mode everyday.

Cons

Too many to list down. Annual leave is only there for you to see & view. They won't approve your leaves and your salary gets deducted. They require that only MCs from BP outlets are accepted but once you give them the proof, they'll send you a warning letter instead. Management removed everyone in HR and the head of Accounting is now doing HR work. Management made a Malaysia detour to interview every staff in every outlet. They check your 'leave pattern' but didn't bother to check if your offer letter work arrangement is either 'Mon-Sat' or 'Mon-Fri'. If your work arrangement is 'Mon-Fri' then too bad, that means they'll count your weekends (SAT & SUN) as your rest day and will mock you for taking too many leaves. If you're interested to find out how a company can operate without a HR department, feel free to join them. OTs are not being paid but a minute you're late, your salary gets deducted + a penalty fee of rm50 each time. You're expected to accept all the changes made like restructuring (which happens too often) within 24 hours, Even if you didn't agree to anything, they'll state something like 'if no responses are received within 24 hours, it means you accepted it.' in memos.. If you like to take selfies, you would surely like working here because you're expected to send 'wefie' every morning as proof that you're working. Fun.

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