Don’t collaborate and work with them - Consultant Lyra Health Employee Review

1.0
2 Jul 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Don’t work with them. Stay away from them

Cons

I fully echo to colleagues from USA and agrees that it is also my experience “Horrible leadership needing to cut costs for profit. Instead of layoffs, they are silently firing employees for BS reasons. A lot of favoritism, if management doesn't like you on a personal level, you'll be out of the company by the next performance review cycle - doesn't matter about your work performance, they'll find an excuse to fire you. I joined this company truly based on their mission of improving mental health, but they neglect the mental health of their corporate employees.” They basically don’t treat corporate colleagues as humans. Don’t work with them. They are truly rubbish and don’t care about you or your thought, feelings. If you shared your thoughts and feelings, they said your are not following their instructions! In fact they are not your supervisor or manager, but they hold more power than corporate employees. They don’t have diversity either. All of leaders are white mid age Irish or Scottish women. They play dirty and nasty game to get you off as long as they don’t like you.

Explore other reviews about Lyra Health

5.0
8 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Attentive support and development Consistent caseload Managing your own calendar and flexibility Group consultations Clinical support

Cons

None that can be reported. I am trully happy and feel valued and know that I am making a difference

1
1.0
28 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good benefits, Remote work, friendly colleagues willing to provide additional support

Cons

The company is clearly ambitious in its goal to become a leader in the mental health industry, which is admirable. Unfortunately, that ambition often comes at the expense of the wellbeing of its own workforce. Customer Success Managers are consistently stretched beyond sustainable capacity, with leadership citing “business needs” as justification for dramatically increasing account loads without corresponding compensation adjustments because the company is not yet profitable. What has been especially discouraging is the inconsistency in compensation transparency. Employees were encouraged to transition into higher-revenue customer segments with the expectation of increased compensation, only to later be told those moves were considered “lateral” and therefore not eligible for pay increases — despite repeated messaging that compensation is tied to the revenue size of a Book of Business. This has understandably led to low morale, burnout, and a growing lack of trust in leadership. Management frequently acknowledges workload concerns and states they are working toward better processes, yet teams continue to absorb increasing responsibilities with limited clarity, evolving expectations, and ambiguous workflows. Employees are often expected to independently navigate new processes without adequate guidance, while mistakes are met with criticism rather than support. The result is a culture where pressure consistently outweighs psychological safety. It is disappointing to see a company built around improving mental health struggle to meaningfully prioritize the mental wellbeing and sustainability of its own employees.

2
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