CipherHealth Reviews

3.0

45% would recommend to a friend

(99 total reviews)

Jake Pyles

49% approve of CEO

44% positive business outlook

CipherHealth has an employee rating of 3.0 out of 5 stars, based on 99 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The CipherHealth employee rating is 22% below average for employers within the Information Technology industry (3.9 stars).

Reviews by job title

99 reviews
1.0
23 Sept 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The Penn Plaza location is easy to access via the subway, and the new office as of 2018 is a huge upgrade to the previous dump. The technology is decent – the post-discharge follow up calls are effective at reducing readmissions while the digital rounding is table stakes adequate.

Cons

The negative vibes at Cipher begin at the top – the culture is terrible. Don’t be fooled by the recent slew of fake reviews (3 glowing reviews on June 10th anyone?), nobody is happy at Cipher. The CRO is a passive aggressive slave to JMI, the private equity group that dumped nearly $40M into Cipher in 2018 and as a result has shifted the culture to pandering to JMI whims. What was formerly a decent opportunity to penetrate the patient engagement market has turned into a bevy of miniscule territories accompanied by unrealistic expectations. There isn’t a single person making their number (apart from 1-2 ‘favored nations,’ which I’ll revisit in a moment), as massive hiring (and most recently firing) has slashed normal territory size into 1-2 state regions, with 15 state quotas. As a result, nobody is making any money and everyone is living in fear. Leadership urges the sales team to hound prospects even if the sales team has been told the timing isn’t appropriate by prospects – at best nothing happens, and at worst people create negative associations with Cipher (and your name). There are a few ‘legacy’ sales reps that are handed plum territories; interesting how one’s territory is comprised of only community hospitals while those that should have landed under one’s purview are with other folks. If you only trust certain people to manage deals, why are you on a massive hiring spree? Do you think it’s motivating to the staff to show blatant favoritism? One of the junior legacy favored reps was recently promoted into a leadership role and he promptly fired the majority of his team shortly after flying everyone in for a quarterly business review! Great use of company funds and way to keep morale high! Unsurprisingly, the turnover at Cipher has been through the roof, both voluntary and involuntary. There are countless ‘today is my last day at Cipher’ e-mails in which relieved individuals write phony comments about how much they’ve loved their time at Cipher and would like to remain in touch. These of course are better than the ‘so and so is no longer with Cipher, we thank them for their contributions.’ Do you? Folks are sometimes put on performance plans (often after working at the company for less than 3 months – is that on the employee or on the company for poor training?), and are sometimes let go based upon knee jerk reactions by the CRO and his cronies. The Chief People Officer, not to be outdone in phoniness, will be quick to respond to Glassdoor comments with generic fluff about how great Cipher is; she may have even stopped doing this as it is likely a full-time job at this point. Cipher has a culture of overworking and underappreciating people, a testament to the extremely inexperienced leadership.

1.0
3 Aug 2020

HR has been weaponized

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-Clear and consistent from our President throughout this pandemic -New exec team members seem competent and professional

Cons

It’s completely abnormal to be afraid to go to HR because you fear the Chief People Officer. As an employee, honestly where are you supposed to go if you can’t rely on nor trust HR? It’s not okay to feel humiliated after leaving a meeting with the CPO. It’s not okay to hide issues with your manager because you know they are close and any complaints that you have will be swept under the rug. How many people need to quit before someone realizes that people are quitting because of how broken this function is here. Good people are quitting because they have no growth opportunities and if you end up on the wrong side of HR you’ll be stifled at every attempt to grow your career. If this continues more good people will quit.

2.0
4 Dec 2017

Accounts team needs help

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

People are pretty nice overall and really care about improving healthcare. Lots of smart people with great ideas.

Cons

The product team is in an interesting place since it takes product ideas from the accounts and sales team ... the only issue is that they never say 'no' to a feature. At some point, the feature gets built out and it's only produced a product line that is TOO configureable. This leads to something failing at every single deploy and then the product team/certain accounts team members have to pick up the pieces. Exec team is not kept in place. There are a lot of examples of harassment and misogynist microaggressions that have become commonplace at CipherHealth. You would think that for a company that's got so many women and women in leadership roles, that the exec team would be a bit more friendly to women. But it's the opposite. Male employees with significantly less merit are transferred to different teams, given credit, and are overall treated better within the company. There are examples of exec members who deliberately show the desire to stunt female employees career trajectories at the company and discredit them. Some of my female colleagues were gaslit (when someone manipulates you into questioning your own sanity) by male exec team members after the employees raised concerns about their work and overall trajectory at the company. I do my best to work as hard as possible and to leave the office as soon as I can just to get a breather from the atmosphere. CipherHealth makes it a big talking point that you can easily schedule a 1-1 with execs, but as a woman, I really don't feel comfortable doing that with some of the exec members because why would I subject myself to being ridiculed and harassed on 1-1 coffee appointment outside the office? The accounts team really needs help though. A lot of people have left or have been fired and work is just being piled on to a smaller group of people each time someone leaves. The current accounts leadership is not doing well and many find that the leadership is haphazard and manipulative. If leadership doesn't like your or you just don't 'click' socially with the others, they will find ways to put you on a performance improvement plan with zero reason based on your work at the company. Don't work here. You can find a better place to work that doesn't make you sacrifice your own mental health.

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CipherHealth Response
8y
CipherHealth is an Equal Opportunity Employer with strict anti-harassment policies and we are sorry you are having a negative experience with us. We wish these concerns would be brought to the numerous available channels so we could address them with you. Sometimes, a person's achievements may not be apparent to the entire team, so it may feel like people are being considered for opportunities for other reasons, but we have and always will operate as a meritocracy. Please feel free to reach out to the TLC team to provide further details so we can investigate these issues. As we are in a fast-paced industry, we set high standards for all of our team members and work together to achieve success. We hope you'll come speak with us soon.
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Glassdoor has 107 CipherHealth reviews submitted anonymously by CipherHealth employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if CipherHealth is right for you.