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BioBridge Global

Is this your company?

Terrible Company who doesn’t care about you. - Mobile Phlebotomist BioBridge Global Employee Review

2.0
Jan 24, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Literally the only thing I liked working here was the overnight shifts we had they were a lot of fun if you were with the right staff.

Cons

You guys don’t understand the pain and suffering you guys put Mobile Phlebotomist through. You guys do realize that we are the one collecting your units? Literally the only reason why you guys function as a company. I can’t seem to understand why you guys are crucial and uncaring for us. Sure “if you don’t like the job then quit” but this isn’t the case you have us doing way more than any other position including for fixed site techs for the SAME pay! How ridiculous. And you see why you can’t keep a decent staff? 60 hours a week lol you guys are a terrible company.

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BioBridge Global Response
7y
Thank you for taking the time to provide your feedback. At BBG, we are committed to creating a positive and collaborative environment for our entire team, so we’re disappointed to hear about your experience. Would you be willing to speak with us directly, so we can hear more about these issues from your perspective and work to address these concerns? You may contact Tareka Beasley at 210-731-5555, ext 6543. We all look forward to doing all we can to continue to improve our organization.

Explore other reviews about BioBridge Global

5.0
Dec 11, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I've worked with them for a little over a year and my contract was extended. They are a great team and very communicative.

Cons

Honestly haven't had any issues. Highly recommend.

1.0
Feb 8, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The mission is compelling on paper, and many of the individual contributors genuinely care about the work and the people it’s supposed to serve.

Cons

There is a significant disconnect between stated values and lived reality. While the organization positions itself as people-first, internal practices often suggest otherwise. Concerns about workload, burnout, and psychological safety are acknowledged verbally but rarely addressed meaningfully. Leadership decisions feel inconsistent and opaque. Patterns emerge where the same individuals are repeatedly rewarded while others are quietly pushed out, often under the guise of “performance” without adequate training, support, or feedback. This creates an environment where employees learn quickly that survival depends more on proximity to leadership than on competence or integrity. HR functions more as a risk-management arm of leadership than as a neutral resource for employees. Raising concerns can result in isolation, deflection, or subtle retaliation, which discourages honest communication and erodes trust. Despite the nonprofit / mission-driven framing, the internal culture often mirrors the worst aspects of corporate environments: silence over accountability, optics over repair, and high emotional labor with little protection for the people doing it.

4
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