Upper management had a big shift when the old CEO Rick Means retired, back around 2019 or so. Most of the rest of the VPs also retired shortly after, so the new wave of management that came in, although had very well earned their time there, were not all qualified to be holding upper management positions (especially on the claims side). It was one of those things where 'when it's not broken, don't fix it' just never existed. Vital operating systems got changed on a monthly basis, procedures also got changed, policy volume was up which also meant claim volume went up, and we were desperately understaffed. Over a 2-3 year span, all employees main complaints were 'we need more help.' And it was the quintessential meme where employees beg for more help, but are awarded with a pizza party. Sinking ship and added stress to employees over YEARS will equal the significant turnover they've been experiencing. I watched a lot of good people leave because they couldn't take it anymore.