Training lacks transparency and fairness — proceed with caution - Members Service Representative HealthEquity Inc. Employee Review

1.0
Oct 21, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

No pros at Health Equity at all

Cons

The training experience at this company was deeply disappointing. The hourly rate of 17.00/hour was never competitive, the onboarding process is rigid, opaque, and unforgiving. New hires are required to pass three assessments—including a final mock call with a trainer—but these are not disclosed during recruitment. Failure in any leads to termination, and outcomes appear to be at the trainer’s discretion, which opens the door to bias and inconsistency. The culture felt performative and cult-like, with forced enthusiasm masking a lack of genuine support. Trainers often seemed too emotional frustrated and dismissive, and there was little room for constructive feedback or growth. The company emphasizes its “at-will” status, which unfortunately seems to justify abrupt dismissals without meaningful explanation. If you're a candidate from a marginalized background, I strongly recommend researching alternative employers that prioritize transparency, equity, and psychological safety. This environment did not reflect those values.

Explore other reviews about HealthEquity Inc.

5.0
Jul 8, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great Company that makes work life balance a priority

Cons

A little lacking as far as training is concerned and documentation in place

1.0
Apr 23, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Benefits, perks, remote work, unlimited PTO, and stock options.

Cons

Unfortunately, what has happened with most companies that grow too fast has occurred here. Too much focus on sales and marketing, and diminished focus on retaining clients or making sure new technology and processes are properly trained. Because of miscommunication and a lack of training, it's impossible to get help from other departments without a ton of pushback. Management would rather blame employees for problems than examine why processes aren't working properly. They now want all roles to sell product, even though that is not in their job descriptions. I wish HR would be more involved in how management speaks to employees because it's incredibly unethical and problematic every time we have a meeting. Whoever the C-suite is listening to on how to be good leaders should be fired, because they are taking a page out of every toxic workplace stereotype, instead of looking at how things can be ethically and properly fixed. There is no focus on clients or employees anymore, just getting more money.

6
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