Ok - Anonymous employee DebtBlue Employee Review

3.0
28 Jun 2022
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Some fun activities. They offer benefits.

Cons

Management really doesn't care about you. Here today gone tomorrow. HR is a joke. She has no idea what she's doing. Executive management perfers not to listen to employees and issues they find doing their jobs. Always production but never wants to give you tools to do it effectively. Talk about giving you opportunities for growth but really doesn't support that either. They get you in the door on potential but really they don't care to see you grow. Really sad, it could be a really great company, it just needs better management. Too much turnover.

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DebtBlue Response
3y
We value and appreciate your insight as an employee. Our intention is to make DebtBlue the employer of choice, and part of that is continued accountability, commitment to improvement, and actively empowering our team to voice their ideas, opinions and feedback. We have an open-door policy across our executive team, management team, and HR Department and encourage you to submit your feedback directly.

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5.0
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Pros

Great management team that will do their best to make you successful.

Cons

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1.0
13 Jan 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

There are absolutely no pros to working there.

Cons

Management culture is deeply problematic. I experienced a sustained hostile work environment involving multiple leaders, and despite HR being aware that I was in distress months earlier, no meaningful action was taken until the situation escalated significantly. This delay allowed inappropriate conduct, gossip, and intimidation to continue unchecked, directly impacting my mental health and ability to perform my job. When the issue was finally investigated, the company’s response appeared more focused on minimizing liability than protecting employees. Rather than enforcing its own “zero tolerance” harassment policy, leadership opted for superficial fixes that did little to address the severity, duration, or impact of what occurred. The message was clear: preserving management and optics took priority over accountability and employee well-being. The environment discourages speaking up. Reporting concerns came with fear of retaliation, isolation, and being quietly labeled a “problem” instead of being supported. Even when concerns were validated enough to prompt internal action, the corrective measures were weak and failed to restore a sense of safety or trust. There appears to be a pattern of complaints against the same individuals, yet the company continues to rely on minimal interventions rather than decisive action. This creates a culture where harmful behavior can persist, policies exist only on paper, and employees are left to absorb the emotional and professional fallout.

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