Decent Place to work, minus the politics - Anonymous employee Sutter Health Employee Review

3.0
Jan 18, 2014
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great benefits, Free healthcare for family and decent PTO although all holidays are also drawn from your PTO bank. Flexible hours depending on what affiliate you work for

Cons

The office politics are a nightmare. In order for a decision to be made, you have to attend multiple meetings, get sign off from everyone and their mom, and then wait in the dark for someone to make a decision. A lot of dead weight under qualified people doing a job they have no business doing. Management gets way more incentives than the regular employee like annual bonuses A lot of people jumping ship after a poor implementation of their new EMR Epic.

Explore other reviews about Sutter Health

5.0
Jun 18, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I love working for Sutter, they are a solid company offering competitive pay and benefits. The part I love the most is they promote making a career with them making it easier to show up an contribute every single day!

Cons

I don't have any cons to speak of.

3.0
Jun 11, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Leadership trainings, conferences, educational opportunities, Senior leadership seems to respond to employee feedback, Great organizational transparency and clarity around goals and direction, Front-line leadership receiving recognition more often, Fair (not amazing) compensation and benefits overall, Organization seems to be healthy and growing which is encouraging for job security and retention.

Cons

Unsustainable front-line leadership expectations, responsibilities, and tasks without providing support from supervisors or assistant managers specifically in San Francisco campuses, High burnout risk among front-line leaders which is continuing to increase, Growing list of contradicting or conflicting priorities. Patient experience scores have improved greatly in SF but patient quality/safety and employee satisfaction has become the apparent cost of that, Very unreasonable span of control for front-line leaders, i.e. way too many direct reports, Meeting metrics and KPIs at all costs is the message being received. Front-line leaders are left scrambling to reach the data points (regardless of the methods), to get there. In other words, we might be meeting the metrics and KPIs on paper, but that doesn’t necessarily mean the real purpose or reason behind those metrics is being performed. We’re just desperate to keep our jobs, The leadership culture in the last 6-9 months has shifted towards motivation through fear. Fear of losing our jobs or bonuses rather than motivation by providing actual daily support in doing our jobs and genuine concern and encouragement to succeed.

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