symplr Reviews

3.1

35% would recommend to a friend

(432 total reviews)
avatar

Venkat Kavarthapu

100% approve of CEO

30% positive business outlook

symplr has an employee rating of 3.1 out of 5 stars, based on 432 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The symplr employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

432 reviews
1.0
24 May 2021

Mission Impossible

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I can't think of one

Cons

Too many acquisitions in a very short period of time--20 in 2 years? Not enough time between acquisitions to bring everyone up to speed. Inferior health insurance. Most acquired employees lose over a year of bonus and/or raises. C-suite is a boys club--all male and friends from former companies. Newly acquired employees who can bring a lot to the table are discounted giving preference to older employees acquired previously. Permissive PTO is a joke. I had a solid 6 weeks of PTO prior to being acquired but haven't been able to take the 6 weeks since joining symplr. Employees hired either through a former acquisition or otherwise are condescending and unhelpful. Having to work up to 16 hours a day or work all weekend leaves ZERO work/life balance. CEO says talk to your manager if you are working too many hours. Yeah, right. Talk to your manger and she/he says "deal with it."

2.0
6 Sept 2017

Total Nightmare

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Some positions offer flexible work hours or work from home options

Cons

The downsides to working for symplr are more than I can write in a single post. To keep the post as useful as possible, I will break them down into three main indictments: 1. Systemic Communication Problems Without exaggeration, I have never seen a company as small as symplr struggle so much with a fundamental pillar needed for success. Problems with internal communication will always result in problems with external communication. Examples of poor communication include but are not limited to: - Entire campaigns regarding system changes being drafted, reviewed, scheduled, and distributed without a single person in a customer facing role knowing anything about it. (Can you imagine getting told by a customer that you have worked with for months that a major feature is now missing from the product suite before you even knew? Yeah, I couldn't either until working for symplr.) -"Strategic Enhancements" to key dashboards that customers use on a daily basis being completely modified, once again, without a single person in a customer facing role knowing about it. (My favorite was when they decided to modify the Health System dashboard with a scoring system that was baseless) -Deciding that a product will no longer be made available or supported while the product is still being actively marketed on their website and with deals in the pipeline that are contingent on the successful delivery of said product . Shoutout to Visitor Management! 2. Addiction to the "Quick Win" It is very obvious, symplr executives and their investors are dead set on the idea that in the course of 3-6 months, they can make huge leaps in their sales pipeline, the quality of their software (without proper testing), or conversions from competitors. The market is very mature with most, if not all, healthcare systems already having some sort of credentialing in place. Add on top of this the consolidation of smaller healthcare system being purchased by larger ones and you can find yourself re-pitching against a competitor and losing large accounts because they, of course, want a consistent product system wide. In this environment, it is extremely important that you play a long game. symplr doesn't play this - they want to buy up all sorts of other assets and other companies without competency to combine their services or products in a promising way. Just take their Provider Management platform Cactus as an example. Once they purchased Cactus, they moved quickly to make changes on a platform that would be sunset in two years. You are literally creating your own problems to be solved within a two year period. This is not a one-off example but rather reflects a default mode of operation. 3. Lack of Executive Accountability/Unmerited Promotions and Accolades This problems if fed directly by the first two indictments. Some executives are given free reign to invest in products, services, and initiatives that cost the company literally hundreds of thousands of dollars with no clear ROI and absolutely no accountability. For instance, on several occasions investments were made in entire site redesigns and product management was directly influenced with initiatives that were worked on in complete silos. Likewise, people who were known as complete trouble-makers in one department (embarrassing sales people on phone calls with customers, lying to customers, etc.) were given higher-paying positions in an unrelated department without any previous qualifications.

1.0
20 Sept 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

None since acquisition of our company

Cons

Main goal of company is mergers & acquisitions so they can eventually go public/sell. There is no communication/plan for staff of acquired companies even months after you have been acquired. You are just told to be patient & "trust us" but don't have any idea what your job will be, who you will report to, territories, salary/compensation, benefits, ect. Their culture is built around executive leadership brushing off multiple sexual harassment instances (please read other reviews). They are outsourcing implementation and development to non-healthcare companies. Products are dated and rely on hardware. Lots of growing pains will be required to move to cloud and have any type of integration/similar look across solutions; especially when they are only focused on M&A. Staff is turning over at record rates and the knowledge is leaving with it.

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Glassdoor has 452 symplr reviews submitted anonymously by symplr employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if symplr is right for you.