Teladoc Health reviews

3.1

45% would recommend to a friend

(904 total reviews)
avatar

Chuck Divita

44% approve of CEO

27% positive business outlook

Teladoc Health has an employee rating of 3.1 out of 5 stars, based on 904 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Teladoc Health 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

904 reviews
2.0
Mar 11, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

People generally want to do the right thing, smart people to work with. People are generally too busy for the usual corp games.

Cons

Many of my interviewers warned me, but I didn’t realize it until I got here. It takes a bit to sink in, but this company is so, so severely understaffed. I understand there are hard times, the problem is here, there is no plan to make up for it and the expectations just keep getting piled on. SO many people come and go in a year or less. Massive turnover all around. Not to mention, a stock price that is consistently tanking, and a good chunk of your compensation is based upon it. So, basically your compensation gets cut again when your stock is worth significantly less. I really want to like this company, I like my boss, but it will take over your entire world and then you are realize you’re not even getting paid for it. Compensation not even close to keeping up with inflation and work life balance is some of the worst that I’ve seen. What’s even worse is that it doesn’t really seem like the executives care. Townhall‘s where they “took off the anonymous function to be more transparent“… Give me a break, then of course no one gives input, not that I think it would change anything, anyway.

1.0
Dec 2, 2020

No longer a good place to work for IT pros

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Pay and benefits are pretty decent. Everyone works from home during this time of Covid of course. Lots of smart people

Cons

There is no longer any attempt at work / life balance. I created a very positive review of the company a few years ago, sadly I can't amend it. So I create this new one. Since a little before Covid IT management's attitude toward their techies seems to have changed. Expectations are set so high that it is impossible to have a weekend, let alone vacations. Most of us are handing back weeks of PTO come year end. We are expected to be available 24x7 for even trivial matters. Teladoc doesn't "work from home", we are "always in the office" Source of the problem is an absolute refusal to hire. Since Covid the company has been very successful, but the workload and expectations have soared while IT staff has been reduced, leaving the remaining people in a state of downright despair. A year ago this was a great place to work, I valued the job highly. Now I am looking to leave as are several others I know as well. People feel unvalued, replaceable, interchangeable. I have no idea what senior IT management is thinking, to triple the workload, plan major projects and not staff appropriately. Breaks my heart to see a good organization intentionally broken. Please note this applies only to IT. I have no idea about the state of things in the rest of the company.

1.0
Feb 18, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I was hired by Teladoc last year to drive sales with Fortune 500 companies. The attractive comp package and greenfield opportunity for their product lured me from my former HC services sales job. I soon realized it was too good to be true. Management has their heads in the sand on where industry pricing has gone and can’t compete unless they change. The main issue is the pricing terms management forced us to sell are way off market. Here’s how the typical sales call would go with the head of a prospective customer’s HR/ benefits department… Potential buyer: Sounds like an interesting concept, what is the cost? Me: There is a monthly fee per employee plus $40 per consult. Potential buyer: Ok but most our employees don’t go to the hospital every year so it may be hard for us to justify committing to a fixed monthly fee regardless of usage. I see there are other providers that offer the service with only a charge per consult. Me: We provide unparalleled support which drives usage and saves your company more money. Potential buyer: Just doing some back of the envelope math here, we’d need to have pretty high utilization rates to cover all the fixed monthly fees. What does Teladoc do differently? Me: We are pioneers in this field and the oldest provider. Potential buyer: But earlier you said you’re a tech company, isn’t having old technology a bad thing? Me: We have the most proven product with the largest number of users. Potential buyer: Not to be flippant but AOL once had the biggest user base and charged a fee. Look we have to get two bids for any new product or service we buy. I just don’t think I can get our CFO to ok Teladoc when I have to show him your service and price side-by-side one of your competitors. I was previously a top producer at 5 prior HC services companies, guess how many Fortune 500 customers I signed up Teladoc? Zero! After repeated meeting outcomes like that one I went back to management to explain to the situation. Their response was to hold the pricing policy even if the industry had change. This made it impossible to compete. As anyone in sales knows, the higher the margin of the product you sell, the more you can get paid. This wasn’t the case at Teladoc. Based on the commission rates and salary of our sales team I assumed our product generated high margins. I soon found out this was not the case and that management was desperately spending money not to grow the monthly fee business but to keep existing customers from leaving. Management’s logic was if we stop pushing our monthly fee terms to prospective customers then our existing customers will demand the same. Guess what? All our money came from monthly fees, not the super low margin telephone consult charges. I’d also point out that the flu is the biggest driver of telemed usage. The benign flu season this year will definitely be a near-term headwind that new sales people should consider.

Cons

I never usually post online reviews but felt I should lay out the facts after seeing all these misleading posts that were quite obviously written by Teladoc’s HR dept. I am hopeful this information prevents others from making the same mistake I did.

Viewing 4 - 6 of 904 Reviews

Glassdoor has 1,224 Teladoc Health reviews submitted anonymously by Teladoc Health employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Teladoc Health is right for you.