Micromanaged, Misleading, and Mentally Draining
Pros
Remote Competitive pay- 24 hour for bilingual Humana provides all equipment needed to work from home Access to a program similar to DailyPay Tuition reimbursement programs and other employee incentives Trainers during onboarding were kind, supportive, and made the training experience smooth
Cons
Once training ends, everything changes. The role becomes extremely micromanaged and overwhelming. You’re expected to juggle 20+ different documents and scripts, each with their own processes and steps. One small mistake leads to criticism. They preach "give yourself grace," but in practice, you're picked apart for the tiniest missteps. The role was misrepresented during the interview. It was described as an important but straightforward job—taking in information from members to see if they qualify for the Medicare Savings Program. While that part is important, the workload quickly increased with training sections being added on that weren’t mentioned in the interview. The interview felt relaxed and supportive, but the actual environment is anything but. Feels like you’re working for a government agency—every process must be followed to the T with zero flexibility. PTO is a joke. You have to request it months in advance, and there’s a limited number of slots per day, so approval isn’t guaranteed even if you’ve earned it. Management does not listen and presents a false image of what it's like to work here. I started in a training class of 10 people. By the time we approached our 90-day mark, 4 had already quit. That says a lot. My mental and physical health started to decline from the constant stress and pressure. I truly dreaded logging in each day. After speaking with coworkers, it became clear I wasn’t the only one feeling this way.