Avantages
The purpose, the mission, the goals of the organization, the CEO, the desire and hunger for change is ripe in the air for the organization
Inconvénients
The salary grades across the board are a joke, and they actually present you with a chart on hiring that shows how much taxes they pay on your behalf which is incredibly insulting (who does that?!). They preach competitive compensation but their pay grades are transparent to employees, so anyone can compare to glassdoor, payscale, indeed, bureau of labor, etc. and see that nearly every single job description is underpaid (except higher level executives/managers, and doctors of course). They don't care though, because their third party compensation consultants reassure them they should pay less for being a medium sized non-profit. Long term, HealthPoint will only suffer from a continued lack of talent until they figure this out. You get one bucket of leave, but in total it is less than what other organizations give with two buckets of leave. They think it is the bees knees because the organization is hilariously insular with most employees having little experience with multiple other companies. If you happen to have a spouse, they say they will only cover around half the health insurance costs. While the CEO is very approachable, open-minded and driven to those below him, he has historically surrounded by old guard executives that preach more than listen, and explain more than promote change. The concept of "leadership from any chair" is promoted but in practice if you are not a supervisor, you are likely to be readily dismissed. The CFO displays a great deal of favoritism and old guard tendencies, and you can imagine what that's like when it's the person who holds the purse strings. Also, the CFO is in charge of HR: one wonders why that could be a problem and why it isn't done in other organizations.