Mercy reviews

3.6

60% would recommend to a friend

(2,974 total reviews)
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Stephen Mackin

63% approve of CEO

55% positive business outlook

Mercy has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 2,974 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Mercy 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

3K reviews
3.0
Jul 13, 2023

Okay

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great co-workers that can share in the pain

Cons

Pay, health insurance, and 401k match are all pretty bad relative to industry standards

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Mercy Response
2y
Thank you for taking the time to complete a review and sharing positive and constructive feedback regarding your experience. We appreciate hearing from current and past co-workers, as it provides meaningful insight that helps us improve for the better. If you have any additional feedback to share, please feel free to contact our team via email at mercyrecruitmentfeed@mercy.net. Thank you for your time and dedication!
1.0
May 29, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

No so great to work

Cons

Coworker extremely rude and racist

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Mercy Response
3y
Thank you for completing a review! We strive to create and foster a positive and productive work environment for all Mercy co-workers, and we’re sorry to hear your experience did not meet your expectations. Thank you for your time and dedication during your time with Mercy. If you have additional input to share, please contact our team via email at mercyrecruitmentfeed@mercy.net. Thank you!
1.0
May 23, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Wonderful co-workers everywhere I worked in Mercy. The individual employees truly do care about their work, and their patients, even if they aren't provided support by the company to do their work to the proper standard.

Cons

-Total lack of investment in employees -HR policies (hiring, moving positions within the company) are completely outdated and impose barriers unnecessarily -Pay, benefits are substandard, even for healthcare -Executives are nothing but bags of hot air- all talk of appreciation with no action to prove it. I began at Mercy Springfield as a Unit Secretary at Mercy's minimum wage- $15 hourly. This was the bare minimum I was willing to accept, and had hoped for $17-20 hourly. After being there almost a year and no raise, I was making the same as a cashier in the gift shop. This was especially insulting because I worked on a critical care COVID unit during several of the major spikes. I saw no hazard pay, no increase over someone who wipes trays in the cafeteria. We need food service employees and cashiers- but someone who directly interacts with COVID positive individuals should absolutely receive much higher pay. Mercy is widely known for their lack of investment in employees. You'll find better pay and benefits elsewhere, and bonuses are almost nonexistant unless you're a physician. As an administrative professional, I was totally ignored by company management. If you're not a physician or nurse (RN, not LPN), you are unlikely to receive any kind of bonus, meaningful pay or benefits increase or even words of gratitude in company emails. While nurses saw massive incentive pay during COVID (almost none now, though), admin assistants/clerical individuals got nothing. Most weren't even making $15/hour when the minimum went into effect, so they considered their new "raise" a win. HR policies are very antiquated. While most companies acknowledge that no candidate will likely meet every single requirement- and they acknowledge that the right candidate probably won't- and encourage everyone to apply, Mercy still requires candidates to check. every. box to be eligible for the position. Even if your past career experience proves that you're clearly very qualified, if your education or other qualifications don't meet every requirement in the posting, you'll be ineligible. This same rhetoric goes for moving within the company. I submitted over 25 internal applications for positions, all of which I was more than qualified for, and never got a single interview request. It's not only an outdated way of approaching talent management, but it excludes so many candidates who are qualified, and creates a hostile hiring process that goes on and on. Then the company wonders why their applicant pipeline has dried up. It's because of mismanagement, and the word has gotten out into the community not to bother. Executives would often do their "PR rounds" as I called them- visiting medical units, shaking hands with employees, chatting and telling everyone how much they're appreciated. Never once was this followed up with actions of gratidue-just hot air. Talk is cheap, but actions speak. Enough said. Overall, you're better off going with another health system. It's true that they're all pretty similar- nobody gets into healthcare to get rich. But you deserve to be well compensated for your time and efforts, both physical and emotional. You deserve to be treated with dignity and given the proper resources to do your job well. Mercy isn't the solution for any of those.

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Mercy Response
3y
Thank you for completing a review! We strive to create and foster a positive and productive work environment for all Mercy co-workers, and we’re sorry to hear your experience did not meet your expectations. Thank you for your time and dedication during your time with Mercy. If you have additional input to share, please contact our team via email at mercyrecruitmentfeed@mercy.net. Thank you!
Viewing 202 - 204 of 2,974 Reviews

Glassdoor has 3,081 Mercy reviews submitted anonymously by Mercy employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Mercy is right for you.