Navigate360 Reviews

2.7

42% would recommend to a friend

(115 total reviews)
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JP Guilbault

45% approve of CEO

38% positive business outlook

Navigate360 has an employee rating of 2.7 out of 5 stars, based on 115 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The Navigate360 employee rating is 27% below average for employers within the Management and consulting industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

115 reviews
2.0
30 Apr 2024

Unethical company, focused on numbers at the expense of employees

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-Work from home -Overall friendly teammates who are willing to help one another -Unlimited PTO (though it was stressful to figure out how much was okay to use)

Cons

-Low pay -Lack of transparency from upper management -Constant layoffs -Unreasonable expectations When I first started working at Navigate360, I thought it was the best company I had ever worked for. My coworkers overall were nice, smart people (t was the hardest part about leaving). However, the environment quickly became cutthroat and unstable--especially as the layoffs piled up and they expected us to do more with less. The sheer number of products/solutions (there are many) that staff are expected to stay on top of is truly mind boggling. As the company grew leaner and (literally) meaner, I felt constantly pressured to justify my worth, which was demoralizing. The last straw for me leaving was when the CEO delivered a scolding speech--to an overworked audience traumatized by a recent wave of layoffs--at our company conference, followed by the CRO announcing that if people didn't like the direction the company was going, they should leave sooner rather than later. Fear-based leadership isn't for me, so I did what he said and got out. Once I started job searching, I also discovered I was underpaid. The low end of the salary band for every job I interviewed for was more than I made at Navigate360. There was no room for growth and the annual increases were paltry (not even cost of living).

1.0
21 Apr 2023

Great Mission, Poor Leadership

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The company mission as a whole is incredible and something I truly believed in and the ability to work remote.

Cons

Overall, not a positive experience with Navigate360. I've worked for several different companies and have never experienced such poor leadership on a daily basis, not only was there lack of collaboration, there was no autonomy and extreme micromanagement. This is the place to work if you want to feel under valued, micromanaged, not heard, and drained mentally from the negativity. It's truly a shame given that the mission is one that makes a difference. I believe many of the people who work there are truly there for the mission and put up with the rest. Additionally, if you're ever vocal or outspoken, the HR team will reach out to you and stalk your LinkedIn page daily and block you once you leave. When a company who says they're passionate about mental health and wellness doesn't implement that internally, there's a bigger issue. (And providing a subscription to the Calm app isn't addressing mental health issues)

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Navigate360 Response
3y
Thank you for your response. Navigate360 is proud to be a Certified Great Place to Work for the second consecutive year. Our company is also recognized among the best 99 employers among a 22-county region in Northeast Ohio as determined by the Employers Resources Council. It is unfortunate you did not have a positive experience. Our most recent engagement survey data shows that 93% of our employees are actively engaged. Coworker Cohesion, Supervision and Trust in Leadership are among the highest ratings in the survey. All employees, including the HR team, are encouraged to get to know new employees. The Company also encourages constructive feedback from all employees. This occurs at the functional level and during quarterly town-hall meetings as well as through quarterly pulse engagement surveys. Navigate360 is also very proud of the unique mental health benefits it offers employees including Spring Health (access to a wellness coach and mental health counselors at any time), two employee assistance programs, flexible PTO, remote work, parental leave, bereavement leave, Calm family subscription, flexible work schedules, an inclusive wellbeing program, and several policies that promote an employees mental health and wellbeing. Navigate360 is a fast-paced, mission-based company that encourages collaboration and recognition of high-performers. Although this culture is not for everyone, we are proud that 93% of our employee are engaged. Data shows our employees resonate with one another and embrace a respectful and professional culture that is based on respect, openness, honesty, trust, collaboration and high-performance. We will continue to solicit constructive employee feedback as a means to continue improving. Although Navigate360 was clearly not a good fit for you, we wish wish you the very best in your future endeavors.
1.0
9 Jan 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Coworkers are awesome a lot of support from each other but it’s because employees are like soldiers in the war. No help is coming your on your own. Mission is amazing and it feels great to help people with their safety plan

Cons

Fear based work place. Fear is the main energy here. At first, I thought the problem was me. Maybe I didn’t have the right clothes or know the right business jargon. I walked on eggshells at work. I went home anxious and discouraged every night. Gradually it dawned on me that it wasn’t just me. My co-workers were uptight, too. No one was having a good time in our workplace. What made everyone so nervous and fearful? It was leaders that lacked confidence. Confident leaders trust themselves enough to hire people they can trust. They don’t watch their employees like hawks. They don’t enact rules and policies to cover every situation, because they know their employees will rise to every challenge. They don’t set up control mechanisms to keep people from using their native smarts and ingenuity. They don’t measure every keystroke and every minute spent on any activity. They know that focusing on their mission and big, shared goals is a million times more important than measuring everything in sight. Lots of policies and yardsticks everywhere are the signs of this fear-based workplace. Measurement of non-essential things is the first sign of a workplace ruled by fear. And this place has it. In a fear-based workplace, everyone is focused on their daily goals. They have to be because if they miss a goal, they could lose their job. You won’t get collaboration or innovation out of people who are scared to death! And this is what happens here. Managers specialize in assigning work, measuring results, punishing infractions and maintaining order. In a healthy culture, managers specialize in listening to employees, problem-solving with them, celebrating successes and envisioning even greater successes! This does not happen here no success celebrated. It’s what have you done for me right now. Here people are afraid to tell the truth because they already know no one wants to hear it. How do I know this? It’s obvious, because the biggest truth of all – namely, “Our culture is horrible, but bad things happen to people who say so” is never acknowledged. It is the elephant in the room. People talk incessantly about who’s up and who’s down in the company stock index. The rumor mill is more credible than official communication. In a healthy company, managers and employees talk about sticky topics. They don’t avoid them just because they are awkward to address. They think they talk about them but they don’t. They give stock answers of it’s rapidly moving company because we are moving fast and growing. Acquiring other companies is not growth. We are not growing where we need to be. Employees wonder whether they’ll still have a job next week. A great performance review or an on-the-job triumph does not guarantee anyone another week of employment. People work under a cloud of fear and suspicion. Following rules and avoiding blame are every employees’ top priorities. Collaborating, experimenting and having fun do not make the list. If there is a company mission statement on the wall, no one cares about it: the only mission employees can focus on is “Don’t screw up! And sale or you are gone! Managers talk about collaboration and out-of-the-box thinking but no one takes them seriously. They have already decided how to do it, their way because they know what works for a company that they have been at less then a year and think they know more then the people that have been doing this far longer. You cannot get collaboration or new ideas from beaten-down employees especially when you know they won’t listen. Employees disappear without warning. When someone disappears, people speak their names in whispers if they mention them at all. The only way to find out if someone is gone is by rumor mill even if your job requires interaction with them. The smartest and most capable employees don’t get promoted. If any do internally. The people who get promoted are the ones who most wholeheartedly embrace the fear-based culture or is friends and family with leadership. The hardest thing to do here is to stay human. When you keep your sense of humor, your warmth and your confidence despite the cloud of fear, you can expect to be labeled ‘unprofessional’ or worse, lose your job. You have to become Corporate Charlie to survive. You can stand up for yourself and your co-workers but if you do, you have to be ready to get a job fast if you are pushed out the door for naming the elephant. In this culture your manager may throw up their hands and say ”I agree with the points you’re making, but there’s nothing I can do to change things! We just have to put up with it and do our best.” Even though a lot of time and energy will result in waste and unsuccessful attempts to get done what needs to be done.

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Navigate360 Response
5y
Thanks so much for taking time to write such a detailed review. To your point, coworker cohesion is exceptionally strong at Navigate360. The Employers Resource Council (ERC) recently conducted an independent employee engagement survey at the company. The results of this survey showed that 99% of the employees "strongly agreed" that Coworker Cohesion was very strong. This survey showed that 78% of the employees at Navigate360 are highly engaged. Navigate360 acquired four companies in 2020 and experienced rapid growth. As a result, there are several new employees and products. To help ALL employees gain a strategic understanding of this growth, the company will continue holding open bi-weekly coffee talks with the CEO and monthly town halls. During these gatherings, information is openly shared and employees are asked for their input. Thank you for sharing your experience and we wish you the very best in your future.
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Glassdoor has 119 Navigate360 reviews submitted anonymously by Navigate360 employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Navigate360 is right for you.