The grass really was greener elsewhere - Analytics Engineer Health Catalyst Employee Review

1.0
Aug 25, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The people there are amazing. Nearly everyone is nice, helpful, and a team player. The executive team is transparent and is led by a CEO that truly cares about each team member and strives to be understanding. They try to promote a work/life balance and flexible PTO.

Cons

The COVID-19 pandemic negatively affected the employee experience at Health Catalyst. Promotions and raises were put on hold, 401(k) match was paused and ultimately reduced, and bonuses were dismal with the decision to base them off pre-COVID standards. Though Health Catalyst tried to be accommodating to workers that had to watch their kids during the shutdown, they consequently diverted more work to those that either do not have kids or were in a situation where they could still work throughout the day. Achieving a work/life balance is encouraged. However, there were many times (even before the pandemic) where the demands of work got to a point where a balance could not be achieved. In my situation, there were many weeks where I worked well above 40 or 50 hours and still had some managers discourage time off to meet outrageous deadlines. Despite these conditions, Health Catalyst reassured their employees by saying it could always be worse and pointed to companies that were severely struggling due to the pandemic. They conveniently did not talk about companies that were still excelling and experiencing great years either through circumstance or adaptation. Nearly all of Health Catalyst's post-IPO policies have been to protect their bottom line. They still proclaim that their employees are their top priority, but when backed into a corner, cuts had to be made to keep promises to investors. The only reassurance given were vague promises to make up for these cuts once the bottom line improved to a higher level without any explanation of what this level needed to be. To exacerbate these issues, there is a cult-like attitude from many of the Health Catalyst employees. Perhaps these apologists benefitted from the years of plenty before the IPO or have found themselves by luck or connections in a good spot. Either way, these employees quickly jump to the defense of Health Catalyst when legitimate concerns are raised and shower the C-suite with praise for these tough decisions. Dan, the CEO, does try to address and take seriously every concern an employee raises, but those that defend every decision of Health Catalyst are persistent and strive to negate or disregard their fellow teammates' concerns. Health Catalyst often uses leveling and compensation to attract employees with experience elsewhere while current employees are expected to only level up every few years. This results in new hires coming in and being compensated more than current employees with similar backgrounds and experience. Health Catalyst does claim to promote from within, but omits the fact that many of these promotions are given to employees that have only been with Health Catalyst for a short period of time. Complaints around this are always met with an assurance that every employee is compensated and leveled appropriately. In my situation, the first offer outside of Health Catalyst amounted to over a 35% cash raise or 20% when you look at total compensation. In response to this, Health Catalyst offered no apology or acknowledgement of their miscalculation of my compensation.

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Health Catalyst Response
4y
Thank you for your review and feedback, and I'm glad to hear that you are happy in the new role that you've pursued. I apologize for the delay in providing a response to you. Let me address some of the items you mentioned, that applied more at a company level. First, I'm glad to hear of your positive experiences with the people at Health Catalyst, and I appreciate your kind words directed towards me. I'm also glad to hear that the flexibility was a positive for you. I also wanted to acknowledge, and apologize, that we have gotten behind as it relates to the base salary component of compensation, in a number of roles at Health Catalyst, over the past year. This clearly was the case in your situation, and I regret that this occurred in your case, as I regret it in every other case at Health Catalyst. I also want to acknowledge, as we have done many times in all team member meeting discussions, that we do have financial constraints within which we need to operate in order to keep the commitments we've made to public market investors. These constraints are often more significant than what some earlier-stage companies may face, where there is not a near- or ever mid-term expectation for profitability. But eventually, every company that will survive, must become self sustaining financially, and as such, this needs to be a foundational objective for every company that seeks to be "built to last" and not just "built to flip." Being built to last is certainly our ambition at Health Catatlyst, which made the company's achievement of positive Adjusted-EBITDA in Q2 of 2021 such a meaningful milestone. What we've committed to do is to share as much as we can, as soon as we can, from a compensation perspective, as we succeed as a company. In tomorrow's all team member meeting we will be sharing specific actions and timelines associated with this sharing, including in terms of increases to base salaries, spot bonuses, companywide bonus performance, and annual equity grants. I'm grateful we're in a position to take these actions which will positively impact every team member, but I regret that we weren't able to put these things in place soon enough for you to also benefit from them. Having a longer-term mindset and commitment in both directions is a foundational element that we talk a lot about at Health Catalyst, and that longer-term approach doesn't always work for every team member, which is understandable. We've also strengthened our ability to recognize extraordinary individual performance, and to have ways of approaching unique situations with more flexibility. Here again, I'm glad we've made progress here, but I regret we had not made enough progress soon enough for this to directly benefit you while you were at Health Catalyst. At any rate, I'm grateful for the opportunity to learn from your experience and then to strive to continuously improve. And I'm happy that you're thriving in your new role. Best, Dan

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5.0
Jan 30, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Remote work, good pay, wonderful people

Cons

The company grew too big too fast and has been trying to downsize erratically

3.0
May 5, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great Talent & Culture: The people here are highly capable, collaborative, and committed to helping each other succeed. The partnership between onshore and offshore teams works well and is a real strength. There’s a culture of grit and stability that has helped the company navigate multiple major transitions over the years. Mission-Critical Engineering: The work involves complex data infrastructure that requires deep technical expertise. It can be demanding, but seeing these systems run successfully and support real-world operations is consistently rewarding.

Cons

Wage Compression and Retention Risk: Compensation for tenured and high-performing staff has not kept pace with the market for specialized data engineering and support leadership. In practice, tenure can feel undervalued or even penalized. This creates risk around losing institutional knowledge and operational continuity. Stagnant Career Progression: Contrary to stated expectations, strong performance ratings do not consistently translate into meaningful, market-aligned compensation growth. The process of how compensation is benchmarked lacks clarity in practice, obscuring how compensation decisions are made and what is required to advance.

5
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