Texan Eye Reviews

2.5

35% would recommend to a friend

(52 total reviews)

Tom Walters

62% approve of CEO

39% positive business outlook

Texan Eye has an employee rating of 2.5 out of 5 stars, based on 52 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Texan Eye employee rating is 27% below average for employers within the Healthcare industry (3.4 stars).

Reviews by job title

52 reviews
1.0
25 Jan 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-I've met some pretty great people there (my peers) -Drug reps bring food pretty regularly

Cons

-Once you sign an employment agreement, your time is no longer your own. You are basically required to work over time to make up for the time you lose literally running around during clinic hours because they are so understaffed and overbooked. You are reprimanded when you can't finish your job, but scolded for getting a minute's worth of overtime. I know it's a business and the goal is to make a profit, but it can't all be about the money money money. -When you're hired, you're told that you will get yearly reviews and will have a chance to make more money, but that's not true. The payscale is not where it needs to be, especially if they want to be competitive in this field. -Favoritism is very real. Some of the harshest personalities I've ever come across are either part of management or are some of those "veteran" employees that can do whatever they want. -Women are definitely sexualized here by upper management (i.e. being forced to stay after hours to talk in office, sexually aggressive comments by some male staff members, even patients get inappropriate, unwanted hugs, groping...etc.), but when you want to make a formal complaint, you are hushed and your feelings are shelved because the perpetrators are not disposable like you are. -The chain of command there is seriously convoluted. You are not allowed to talk to upper management directly. You have to talk to this person, to talk to this person, to talk to this person, to have them send an email..... and then nothing is resolved. It's a vicious cycle. -Training was sub-par to say the least. It's the busiest clinic I've ever worked for, or even witnessed, and I was given 2 days of "training." That training consisted of a game of Simon Says, no room/time for questions, and then you're on your own. It was very overwhelming, but I was expected to be sufficient after 16 hours on the jobs. -If you speak up for yourself, you will be performance managed out. Without a doubt. Management does not take criticism well, and any reservation or concern from staff is not tolerated. Basically, if someone higher up the chain of command wants you gone, you're gone. They'll either make you so unhappy when you're there that you'll quit, or they'll find anything to fire you.

1.0
23 Jan 2018

BEWARE the big bad wolf

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Learn a lot about eyes Some fun people to meet

Cons

-Payscale pales in comparison to any other ophthalmic practice in the area -Sometimes encouraged to work harder, not smarter if smarter means more money out of their pocket -Lack of communication between upper/middle management and its staff -Focus on practice, patient, and staff well being is put on the back burner to managements' own agenda (i.e. advancing separate private company/competitor company, research patients) -Upper management is extremely disconnected from anything physically and metaphorically below them (it's a two story building) -Someone may have your back as long as it doesn't affect his/her standing with the individual in question -The volume is insane and this was not even the worst part about the understaffed/overbooked clinic, it was that upper management did not care. $$$$$$$ is all that matters. It's knowing that your manager has your back to your face but will break under the pressure of his/her own boss. -They have a tenure so to speak. If you've been there 5+years, you are untouchable, no matter how absolutely dim you are or how unprofessional you might be, how much venom you may spit...you can do whatever, whenever, however. Tenure. Females will be viewed differently by the upper management. The upper management sees you as an indispensable tool. The upper management may make inappropriate/unprofessional comments to you about others and vice versa. The upper management may make unwanted sexual advances toward you. Do not fear for your job #metoo. The upper management has near control over the clinical manager and some of the doctors. Allegations have been swept under the rug many times before. The upper management may claim to be able to introduce you to important people, get you into certain programs, invite you to his house, invite you to a party.... The upper management may manage a competitor in the same city/market. The upper management may use staff to run his errands not related to the company. Money goes in one hand, out the other.

2.0
25 Feb 2017

Not Worth It

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Full benefits Decent pay 8-5 Mon-Friday

Cons

You are taught only what you need to scrape by. So when patients ask specific questions that we are supposed to know the answer to the techs either leave the room to google it or have to make up an answer that could be mis-informed. When brought to the supervisor's attention they do not care. They don't order nearly enough supplies, we are constantly out of hand sanitizer. There are roaches in our office, we are a health office, yet there are roaches.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 52 Reviews

Glassdoor has 52 Texan Eye reviews submitted anonymously by Texan Eye employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Texan Eye is right for you.