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Sweatshop USA! - Anonymous employee Covidien Employee Review

1.0
4 May 2011
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-Ability to meet people from around the world -Lots of overtime (if you can stand being there more than 40 hrs/week...)

Cons

-Quality comes second to number of products thrown out the door. -They DO NOT hire on temps at all costs. There is a temp agency located INSIDE their building...Some folks have been temps for several YEARS....... -Low pay. -Poor working conditions. There is a wide range of temperatures within the oh so sanitary "controlled environments" causing people to sweat around surgical products...... -The only people that are willing to put up with their brutality on the manufacturing floor are people STRAIGHT in from third world countries. Therefore, communication is very difficult since people are speaking 30 languages. -Very limited time for meals and breaks -Poor communication between departments -Unprofessional management and supervisors -Lots of obligation to work overtime on weekends **It's as though they take pride in how poorly they treat their employees...no joke.

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5.0
2 Mar 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good pay benefit and work life balance

Cons

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3.0
26 May 2012
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Pay is competitive for many of the positions. Benefits are pretty good-medical, dental, vision, 401K HR department is committed to ensuring a respectful workplace so don't be afraid to speak up if you are mistreated by a manager or coworker. Overall fair treatment of employees is observed Focus on improvement activities like Kaizen and Six Sigma.

Cons

Communications from corporate are general and vague and major changes are not communicated very well-the 'rumor mill' will portent a major change (like the pharma division being spun off of the larger Covidien) but communication to employees can be spotty around these issues. Getting promoted can be a mysterious and unclear process - not that many promotions from within. It happens but not as much as it ought to. Too much of a focus on hiring outside candidates. Poor focus on talent development - not enough apprenticeships and interns. Finding a path for 'career development' can be a challenge - you have to do it yourself. Sometimes an excessive focus on financial results to the expense of other things, like employee morale. The manufacturing facilities often seem to be treated like the red-headed stepchildren by the corporate office - resources withheld from the Plants while corporate indulges in elaborate holiday celebrations and excessive numbers of Vice Presidents. Job security appears to be better at the Plants than at Corporate

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