Cardinal Health reviews

3.6

63% would recommend to a friend

(4,960 total reviews)
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Jason Hollar

79% approve of CEO

65% positive business outlook

Cardinal Health has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 4,960 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Cardinal Health employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Healthcare industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

5K reviews
1.0
Sep 11, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

It is full time employment. It can be entry level employment for someone who just graduated college in Chemistry or Biology. You won't do much actual chemistry and biology and the skillset you gain won't be very applicable outside this niche area of PET drug manufacturing. But you will gain work experience in the pharmaceutical industry and in manufacturing operations.

Cons

I was told in my interview that starting pay is $17/hr for Tech I in PET but that it would raise as soon as I got AU certified. I asked how long it takes to get AU certified and was told 6 weeks. Do not believe this. The course takes 6 weeks but it takes several months before you can take the course + six weeks + several months to receive the certification. Then you won't actually get promoted when you get certified. They will make you wait until you are on the site license, which takes another several months to apply for and another several months to wait for approval from the state. Then your supervisor will tell you he will promote you, but will not actually do it. You will get strung along. You will wait for your promotion to get announced but it won't happen. When you question him about it, he will tell you that AU certification is only one factor in promotion and it is discretionary based on the manager's assessment of things like "leadership ability". But your manager only sees you for anywhere from 5 min to an hour per day because you are a third shift employee (10pm start - when you get AU certified you will work opening for some amount of time) and he is a first shift employee (7am start and he stays in his office outside the lab a majority of the time). You will open the site by yourself unsupervised for two hours, then act as a shift lead, generally with the newest employee for another 3 hours, you will perform production, perform sterility, do your paperwork, all without supervision - but when it comes to promotion, the goal posts repeatedly shift further back, and you don't meet the "requirements". In your performance review, your manager will blame you for "not taking the initiative" to become qualified in Amyvid processes, even though that is something that has to be scheduled because it is performed concurrently with your other tasks. This is a trend - your manager will shift blame as much as possible to the least common denominator, which is you. Then when you finally do get promoted between a year and a year and a half later (if you last that long without getting fed up), you will be making $19/hr as a Tech II. In the mean time you will put up with a work environment in which you essentially will be expected to be on-call, and your starting time can vary dramatically by 6 hours or more on only a few hours notice. This happened to me many times. Your manager will either not make a schedule or will make a schedule that is meaningless practically as soon as it is made on a regular basis. You may be expected to be in another state across the country on less than 24 hrs notice to cover for another site (if your site's staffing is adequate and depending on what you are qualified in). When you are sent somewhere, you will have to front the money for your hotel, for your rental car, and the rest of your expenses. Cardinal will reimburse you eventually, but for someone making $17/hr, it will be difficult to have that kind of money in your bank account to allocate to these expenses while you have other bills to pay. You will work some form of third shift whether it is 10pm or midnight or 2am 3am 4am - it will vary, and the more you are qualified in, the more it will vary. You will work weekends also. You will be miserable.

2.0
Jan 1, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Biannual workshops - Program management puts a lot of effort into trying to make them fun for over 100 people. The networking events give you an excuse to email managers and directors you would normally never interact with. Presentations from high level VPs and directors provide valuable insight into their backgrounds and career paths and about the different parts of the organization that most employees don't get to see or hear about. 3-5 days off of work without having to use PTO. Great resume builder - Being able to put that you worked for a $100 billion organization can add some credibility to your resume if you're into tossing big numbers around. Healthcare education - if you're interested in learning more about the healthcare landscape in the USA you'll get it here.

Cons

Lack of diverse experience - Despite being called Supply Chain Management, the program is actually Operations (think nights, long hours, and dreary distribution centers in the middle of nowhere). The first 6-12 months are spent doing a hodgepodge of warehouse work (picking, packing, putting away product, unloading trucks), and the last 24 months are spent as an Operations Supervisor. You'll feel as if you haven't gained or even used any technical or analytical skills - try interviewing for a position outside of the company and you'll be reaffirmed of that. No clear path when you're near 'graduation' - Unless you have an interest in becoming a Black Belt, nothing you'll do in the program's current format really prepares you from an experience or skills standpoint to confidently interview for anything else. Black Belt certification is a lucrative certification, but if you have no personal interest in it, then it's pointless. It goes back to the lack of diverse experience in the program. The stated goal of the program is to prepare you to apply for Consultant positions, but due to not having utilized any advanced software for 3 years, never having done anything relevant, nor having made any real connections outside of your assigned facility (which you'll remain for the entirety) there really aren't many options. No structure - Each facility serves its own unique customers and therefore operates under its own unique schedule. You may placed in a facility or in an area of a facility that may require you to work nights, weekends, holidays, on-call, and EXTENSIVE overtime while some of your other colleagues in the same program do not, but you are all identically compensated. Some folks have managed to get out of the supervisor assignment really early and into either a corporate position or move into a Black Belt position in their distribution center. Good luck getting an explanation on why they did and you're still stuck (yes, after about 6 months as an operations supervisor you'll start to ask if you can move).

1.0
Jan 9, 2011
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Decent Benefits - Overall nice people - On site cafeteria

Cons

Beware of misleading "Enterprise IT" or EIT job titles at Cardinal Health, I worked there for six months and regret it. I only worked there because there were no jobs in the area during that time. If you're looking to work in their Information Technology department read below and avoid this place at all costs. Bullet Points: 1) They misrepresent their job titles and role descriptions. For example: EIT End User Analyst, Password Resets - basically means CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE in the real world. You follow phone scripts and can't be creative or you get yelled at. 2) Micromanagement: They monitor everything you do... For example, if you miss just one call and they yell at you sweatshop style. Very unprofessional. 3) Since this place is basically a call center they have the same crazy rules as other call centers regarding attendance and promotions. Saddest point was seeing talented people with Bachelors Degrees and Masters work at a fake IT call center such as Cardinals.They all dream of getting that job promotions but nope, that won't happen unless you work there for 2 years or more or suck up to the bosses there. In conclusion if you're looking to work in their IT Department, run for the hills! Avoid this place at all costs. YOU'VE BEEN WARNED.

Viewing 34 - 36 of 4,960 Reviews

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