C- leadership team - Advisor Press Ganey Employee Review

1.0
Oct 3, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Amazing colleagues, great mission and clients.

Cons

Narcissistic CEO. Low quality, inexperienced leadership team who are all Yes people and none of whom dare have an opinion that's different from the CEO. Total lack of integrity between stated values and how sr. leaders operate. They are all just holding on to try to make some equity.

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Press Ganey Response
3y
We sincerely appreciate your feedback. Our senior management team is fully committed to our mission, vision and values, and works hard to balance the needs of clients, employees and the business. We take feedback from Glassdoor reviews seriously and will convey your perceptions to the team.

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5.0
Dec 21, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

PG has many talented people that are amazing to work with and learn from. The account teams are structured to allow amazing people working together to support client goals and foster a collaborative environment.

Cons

Upward mobility isn't always aligned perfectly for some roles

2.0
Feb 22, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

If you want to get your hands dirty with healthcare policy or hospital system strategy, the Consulting and Advisory teams do some legitimately interesting work. The data access is also a massive plus—if you’re a Data Scientist, you won’t be hurting for data to work with.

Cons

Instability is the Norm: Constant, unexplained layoffs have created a pretty paranoid atmosphere. Management doesn’t handle change well, and people are always looking over their shoulders. Frankenstein Tech Stack: The company prefers buying new companies over fixing the ones they already own. This leaves you with a core product that's basically held together by duct tape and technical debt. Sales often sells a "dream" that the current tech just can't actually do. Broken Integration: There’s zero effort to actually merge the cultures or systems of the companies they buy. It’s just a revolving door of new names and fragmented processes. Management Deflection: When things go south, leadership tends to point fingers at junior staff or "reorganize" rather than taking any responsibility. The "Bonus" Trap: Don't count on your full package. Bonuses are rarely funded above 70% (it's often less), which effectively feels like a hidden pay cut.

7
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