Crossroads for HR — Opportunity for Real Change - AVP Human Resources LPL Financial Employee Review

2.0
2 Apr 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

A few talented, values-driven individuals remain—committed to doing good work despite the environment. Recent CHRO turnover suggests someone may finally be paying attention and recognizing the need for systemic change.

Cons

Practices HR promotes to the rest of the organization are not modeled internally—eroding trust and credibility. Removal of Sara Dadyar was necessary, but the underlying cultural issues persist. Those who’ve chosen to stay despite years of dysfunction are now in charge—often perpetuating the very issues that need fixing. HR leadership is disingenuous: outwardly polished and performative, while internal conversations are cynical, fear-based, and transactional. Toxic over-functioning is rewarded. Insecurity, control, and territorialism have become normalized—by the very people tasked with shaping a healthier leadership culture.

Explore other reviews about LPL Financial

5.0
3 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great culture and work life balance

Cons

Pay for area of living on lower side

2.0
23 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

LPL Financial offers a flexible hybrid work model, which is one of the better aspects of the company. Managers are generally not overly strict about specific in-office days, giving employees some flexibility in managing their schedules.

Cons

Work-life balance is a major challenge. Weekend release work is common, often averaging two weekends per month, yet there is no overtime compensation. Employees are essentially expected to work a full workweek plus weekends when needed, which has contributed to high turnover on some teams. The culture can also feel harsh and impersonal. Leadership rarely expresses appreciation or recognition for employee contributions, which negatively impacts morale. Some managers come across as cold or overly task-focused, creating an environment where employees feel valued only for output rather than as people. There also appears to be a lack of trust between employees and leadership. Many teammates do not seem confident that leadership understands or genuinely addresses their concerns. Overall, morale feels low, and recognition for strong performance appears limited.

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