Appalling experience - Anonymous employee Medscape Employee Review

1.0
Jan 27, 2020
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

None evident. Maybe Good snacks and fruit in the kitchen.

Cons

I have worked for this company for about 10 months (far too long). I was hired for my seniority and experience or so I was told. I was hired after 3 interviews (1 face to face) unfortunately actual work had nothing to do with the scope of the role required and absolutely nothing about what we discussed during interview stage. I guess they were just interested in filling a vacancy. And fill a report. I honestly failed to understand what exactly they do surely they failed to mention. For the first 4/5 months I spent my time trying to understand and adapt. Definitely pointless. No proper induction nor help of any kind. 1. Most scary and absurd work environment and non existing company culture. 2. Poor and useless induction 3. Outdated process, (political dreadful environment?) no sharing team culture, rude back stabbing manners and incompetent people as a result only the most selfish emerge 4. If you tend to have any sort of logic “don’t go in there”, there is none 5. No clear project scope, again maybe none 6. Outdated process (long, old fashioned and uselessly complicated production chain) 7. No retention/track of previous results or/and mistakes hence no improvements 8. No transparency at all 9. Only focus is some sort of shareholders reports 10. Last but not least very poorly sharky, incompetent and arrogant management 11. The less you know the higher you go In small words “spoiled” environment. Try for your physical and mental health not to go in there! If the small traumatised pet dog of one of a director does not like you then it could get to bullism no jokes…

Explore other reviews about Medscape

5.0
Dec 30, 2024
Anonymous contractor
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Loved my time there. Technology is a bit slow but the brand still resonates. Brand is world renown.

Cons

Company has grown resulting in more process.

1.0
Jun 14, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Some of the lower-level associates and frontline managers are hardworking, capable, and genuinely trying to do the right thing. The best parts of the company are the people closest to the actual work.

Cons

Medscape’s biggest problem is not the employees doing the work. It is the leadership above them. In my experience, many directors, VPs, and executives are out of touch, slow-moving, defensive, and poorly equipped for the modern digital, technical, and data-driven environment the company claims to operate in. The company talks about innovation, automation, AI, and data transformation, but there is often a major gap between the story leadership tells and how the work actually gets done. Too often, work that is presented as automation, AI, or technical advancement appears to rely heavily on manual operational labor behind the scenes. That is not real innovation. That is old-school labor arbitrage dressed up as technology. Leadership also feels deeply impersonal. Many leaders seem unable to sustain a meaningful conversation beyond surface-level small talk like the weather or where someone is from. That matters because it reflects a broader culture where employees are treated more like replaceable resources than people. The culture is political, fear-based, and allergic to accountability. People point fingers, avoid ownership, and protect themselves instead of making decisions. Important initiatives stall because leaders seem more focused on surviving internally than solving actual business problems. I also observed what appeared to be a behind-closed-doors power culture, where senior leaders influenced others to act on their behalf while keeping themselves insulated from direct accountability. In my view, this created the impression of hidden agendas, internal puppeteering, and leadership operating through proxies instead of leading transparently. Employees can also feel pressured and intimidated. I observed situations where recorded conversations or prior statements were referenced as leverage, with the implication that they could be escalated to upper management. That is not accountability. That is intimidation. In my view, the company has a serious pattern of employee-relations problems, and leadership knows it. Concerns are not handled with real transparency or accountability. They are handled quietly, defensively, and in ways that appear designed to protect the company and its leaders first. Ask around, and I would not be surprised if some exits involved private financial resolutions because of how employees were treated or pushed out. From what I observed, the company’s pattern appears to be less about fixing the underlying leadership problem and more about quietly managing the fallout after good employees are damaged, burned out, or forced out. The harsh truth is this: Medscape does not have a talent problem at the lower levels. It has a leadership culture problem at the top. Until that changes, good employees will keep burning out, leaving, or being pushed out while the same leaders protect themselves and call it business as usual. I'd only take a job here if I'm fresh out of college or in desperate need of employment.

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