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Life Flight Network

Is this your company?

Don't drink the Kool-Aid. - Maintenance Department Life Flight Network Employee Review

1.0
Aug 2, 2018
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The benefits are some of the best around, a very healthy PTO package, and the people there (for the most part) are really great. But the environment is so toxic that even the nicest person can absorb into "kill or be killed" mentality, and it makes working there agonizing. You never know who you can count on, and management creates that.

Cons

The first thing the CEO told us during new hire orientation was to just "drink the Kool-Aid." I thought, at first, that it was just a tongue-in-cheek comment, however, little did I know that wasn't so much a cute little quip, but some do-or-die advice. Drink the Kool-Aid. If you're going to work for Life Flight you're going to have to, especially if you work with anyone in the maintenance department. There is no love for that area of the company and it becomes known right away. Think of this area of Life Flight as "steerage" and the other departments as the upper decks, with the Admiral's Cabin being the CEO's office where he decides who he's going to fire that day. Don't let the song and dance about a "just work environment" (or something along those lines) fool you - they don't partake in it. I've often wondered why they even preach this because they regularly fire someone as a scapegoat or pop-off and fire someone because they feel it's the right thing to do. I've never worked at a company where so many people walked around waiting for the shoe to drop, because frankly, LFN may as well have been a Footlocker. I really do think LFN could be a great place to work for because the benefits are fantastic, the people are great and work hard, and the company mission is a good one. The management, however, is among the worst I've ever seen, and I don't say that lightly. I'm not a "burned" employee nor do I harbor ill-will towards them. I just wouldn't let anyone I called a friend work there. You have a honeymoon phase, the CEO loves you, something goes wrong, and you suddenly find a knife in your foot because stabbing your back was too much effort. I saw it time and time again and got out before it happened to me. But hey, you get a lot of PTO! Just don't try to use it or else you might get shamed.

Explore other reviews about Life Flight Network

5.0
Jul 15, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great culture, great people, great management, great equipment

Cons

2am wake-ups to fly in terrible weather

1.0
Apr 17, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Line employees are great when given the opportunity to be professional

Cons

Here’s a stronger version that cuts deeper without sounding emotional or bitter, just controlled and clearly more competent: ⸻ The current clinical leadership structure is deeply ineffective. The newly appointed Clinical Directors and Senior Director lack both operational control and strategic direction. What stands out most is not just poor decision-making, but the absence of actual leadership. There is a heavy reliance on vague language about “closing loops,” yet no evidence of systems being built, problems being solved, or teams being led in any meaningful way. At the executive level, there is a clear disconnect. There is no alignment, no shared understanding of priorities, and no visible coordination between departments. That lack of cohesion is not contained at the top. It filters down into daily operations, creating confusion, inefficiency, and constant rework for those actually doing the job. This organization was once positioned as an industry leader, known for innovation and high standards, with competitive compensation. Now, it now operates reactively, borrowing ideas from competitors instead of setting direction. Pay is abysmal for hours worked. That shift is not subtle. It is the direct result of leadership that avoids accountability and substitutes language for action. The Chief Clinical Officer, in particular, demonstrates an ongoing reluctance to lead with conviction. Instead of developing strategy from within, there is a pattern of adopting external practices without context or originality. This would be less concerning if it were paired with strong execution, but it is not. The result is a fragmented approach that lacks both identity and effectiveness. At present, there is no indication that clinical leadership is capable of managing a department, much less advancing one. What exists is a layer of administration that speaks often but delivers very little. The gap between those making decisions and those carrying them out has never been wider, and it is the organization that is absorbing the cost.

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