Owner needs to lay off the blow - Store Manager LaserAway Employee Review

2.0
Apr 17, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great clients and great services

Cons

Watch out if you have 1 slow month they will take nurses away from you, machines and your job! Owners will smile to your face and the next day get rid of you. Managers have no say who gets hired in their store. Everyone in corporate flys off the handle about the simplest questions. You are damned if you do damned if you don't at this company. You could be doing 100K a month and still not good enough. They always have your job listed on Craigslist and they collect people for no reason. No climbing up the latter at this job, u get hired and everything else is down hill. You may or may not get your bonus, depends on owners definition of if you "earned" it

Explore other reviews about LaserAway

5.0
Jun 17, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Fun treatments and work environment

Cons

Micromanagement overbooking stressful at times

2.0
Jul 1, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Competitive pay and strong training for new aesthetic providers. You’ll gain experience quickly because of the high patient volume.

Cons

LaserAway is a sales company disguised as a medical practice. Revenue consistently comes before patient care and provider well-being. Providers are routinely triple booked, making it nearly impossible to give patients the time and attention they deserve. Rushing through consultations and treatments creates unnecessary stress, increases burnout, and can compromise patient safety. Sales consultants have more influence than licensed medical professionals. Treatments are frequently sold before a provider even evaluates the patient, and nurses are often expected to justify or perform services they may not believe are appropriate. Medical opinions are routinely overshadowed by sales goals. The culture prioritizes quotas, memberships, and packages over ethical, patient-centered care. The PTO policy is extremely poor. Full-time employees receive only about 1.5 weeks of PTO per year, yet you’re expected to keep your schedule open seven days a week. You cannot submit unavailability or reliably schedule appointments in advance without using your already limited PTO. Maintaining any work-life balance is unnecessarily difficult.

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