Working at OneDigital has been one of the most toxic and disillusioning professional experiences. Never in my life have I experienced this level of micromanagement, pressure, and overall dysfunction.
I was hired as an Insurance Benefits Advisor, which is just a fancy title for being on the phone all day trying to sell Medicare Advantage plans to senior citizens. The conversations sometimes over an hour long, emotionally draining, and you start to feel like you're manipulating elderly people into plans they may not fully understand just to meet quotas. The whole process feels like you're walking a fine ethical line—and upper management absolutely knows it. It’s not about truly helping the client; it’s about locking in a sale that lasts at least a month so they can get paid.
Micromanagement is nonstop. You get pinged on Microsoft Teams every hour to "get in Ready Call," meaning you’re expected to be on the phone or immediately ready for another one. You’re only allowed 30 minutes of “personal time” a day—which includes water, bathroom, stretching, or just catching your breath. After-hour-long calls, you're given maybe 2–3 minutes max to take notes before you're expected to be back in the queue. Everything is tracked in real time, and if you're not in the "right" status for 80%+ of your shift, you’ll hear about it. That kind of surveillance and pressure is mentally exhausting.
The systems are a mess—there are tons of apps and logins, and you’re told to be fully signed in and ready the second you’re back from lunch or break, which basically forces you to use personal time to log in. And don't even think about using your phone at your desk—they claim it's a HIPAA violation, but in reality, it’s just another control tactic.
As for training? You’re thrown into real client calls after a week or so of surface-level prep. It’s overwhelming, especially given the stakes: these are real people’s healthcare decisions, and we’re expected to sell plans while juggling compliance, notes, and a dozen systems at once.
The hours are brutal. My commute now has me out of the house from 7:50 AM to 7:20 PM—that’s nearly 12 hours gone for a job that drains you. I asked if I could have my shift switched to a different one which would allow me to spend an extra hour and 20 minutes at home each night and they said no, with no real good answer. There’s zero flexibility, zero grace, and zero real support.
I haven’t burned out yet, but it’s getting close. The only reason I haven’t quit is because I want it to last long enough to put on my résumé—I don’t want to look like the problem. But between the constant micromanagement, the moral discomfort of the sales process, and the complete disregard for employee well-being, I would never recommend this job to anyone. You are a number, and if you break down or fall behind, there’s a dozen people lined up to replace you.