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Phillips Medisize

Part of Molex

Engaged employer

Toxic, stressful, intense overload - Anonymous employee Phillips Medisize Employee Review

1.0
16 Sept 2021
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Sometimes you can snag promotions, you’ll get exposed to way more responsibility than you would anywhere else

Cons

I worked here in a quickly promoted role from supporting one site to global support via their SAP implementation. It was the most toxic (read: cutthroat, blaming, disrespectful) and abusive (screamed at in meetings by the highest level of their external consultants, who they continue to employ) environment I have ever been in. If you’re good, they promote you and give you enough responsibility and work for four people but then speak duplicitously when you tell them you don’t have bandwidth or resources to accomplish what needs to be done. People are literally getting sick over the stress, going on medications and suffering panic attacks. Their parent company, molex , can’t make a good decision to save their life and no one in leadership thinks beyond the current issue. Crisis is all they operate in. There is no planning and their employees come in dead last on priority list. No D&I initiative, No care about engagement, no education, no support. Just stress. Everyone works 12-18 hours a day and weekend time just to stay afloat.

Explore other reviews about Phillips Medisize

5.0
1 Oct 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Compensation Benefits Paid Time Off Culture

Cons

Location Competing priorities Scheduling conflicts

2.0
27 Jan 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The parent company provides good structure and benefits.

Cons

I would recommend considering a short tenure, perhaps no more than two years post-college, primarily for the experience. While the parent company does have a robust structure, the actual policies seem to get lost in a PowerPoint deck and are not practiced within Phillips-Medisize. There’s a pressing need to phase out some long-standing Leaders to enable meaningful change. Management at this organization falls short of what you would expect. The culture feels entrenched in a "good ol' boys club," where micromanagement is disguised as autonomy. Even as an Engineer, you're required to document your tasks on an hourly basis, creating an environment where the focus shifts to producing MS Word documents rather than genuine work outputs. If your Manager visits your site, they usually choose a vantage point where they can observe you all day, rather than utilizing available spaces that may be more comfortable. Training is inadequate; you're thrown into the deep end after completing online computer courses, only to face constant reprimand without proper support. High performers may garner attention and more responsibilities, but this does not translate into bonuses or promotions. The structure for project management is virtually nonexistent—no Agile methodologies or Lean Six Sigma principles are employed. Communication issues are rampant; often, the only Engineer deemed 'in the know' dominates meetings, leaving others in the dark. I was promised that updates regarding my project would be communicated, but this information stagnated before reaching me—despite my role within the project. Furthermore, the compensation here is unacceptably low for the medical device industry. Given that Hudson is now considered a suburb of the Twin Cities, salaries should be adjusted to remain competitive.

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