Pluspunten
Great benefits. Very nice people to work with.
Minpunten
When new Internal job opportunities are available, the best qualified candidate is not always offered the job due to politics. That is one of the main reasons qualified employees are leaving the company which causes high turnover.
Pluspunten
Pay, culture, mission, great products
Minpunten
I have none so far.
Pluspunten
The company’s mission is meaningful and the products genuinely help patients. Many employees across the organization are talented, hardworking, and committed to doing the right thing clinically. In the right division, with the right leadership, this can be a rewarding place to work. Additionally, the sales organization offers strong earning potential, and the compensation and benefits packages are competitive.
Minpunten
The sales organization often feels siloed from the rest of the company. Field realities—physician relationships, reimbursement pressures, hospital politics, and competitive dynamics—are not always well understood by those making decisions outside the sales channel. That disconnect can make the job more difficult than it needs to be. It can also feel like a game of whack-a-mole trying to determine who within the organization is responsible for what. It is also important to note that experiences within the wound sales division can vary significantly depending on territory and leadership. Some reps operate in highly established markets with strong internal support, existing contracts, and additional resources such as associates, distributors, or key account specialists. Others—particularly those in newer or smaller territories—are expected to build the business largely on their own. In some cases, reps benefit from groundwork that has already been laid, including exclusive contracts or well-developed accounts that place them in a strong performance position from day one. In others, reps are required to navigate complex hospital systems, materials management, and competitive barriers with little structural support. These differences can have a meaningful impact on outcomes, yet are not always reflected when performance is evaluated. As a result, success within the division is not always an apples-to-apples comparison, and access to support can feel inconsistent. However, the larger issue for some people, specifically in the Mid-Atlantic wound sales division has been leadership. The individual responsible for managing that region has created an environment where favoritism is obvious. A small group of “favorites” receives consistent praise, support almost to the point of smothering, and advocacy, while others are left to operate with minimal guidance, even when requested. Performance standards are not applied consistently as some individuals are celebrated and encouraged even in months or quarters of underperformance, while others find that even meeting or exceeding goals is not enough. There is also a noticeable lack of professional boundaries. The leadership approach can feel overly personal and paternalistic at times, which does not align with the reality that the team is made up of experienced, independent professional adults. Support is uneven. Certain team members receive proactive guidance and strong internal advocacy, while others are often left to navigate challenges on their own. Feedback tends to follow the same pattern of quick praise for some, and frequent, highly critical feedback for others, regardless of sales numbers. Ride-alongs, which should be opportunities for coaching, are frequently counterproductive. Physician conversations are interrupted with tangents, or attempts to take control of the interaction. It can leave physicians confused and territory reps working afterward to repair professional credibility that was just disrupted. Unfortunately, these ride-alongs often create more work for the territory rep after the fact. The communication style can also be difficult to take seriously in a professional sales environment. Emails regularly arrive written in multiple neon colors with different fonts throughout the message and empty phrases like "go team go", resembling something closer to a middle-school motivational presentation than leadership communication within a national healthcare company. At times, communication can feel more performative than practical, with a strong emphasis on how things look or sound rather than whether they are effective in the field. There is a strong emphasis on visibility over value. Reps are always expected to be on camera for internal calls with little clear purpose beyond oversight, and are frequently “pop-quizzed” on things that have little relevance to selling—such as where a physician attended college, obscure personal details about providers, or even information about the rep’s own bonus structure. Meanwhile, meaningful coaching on territory strategy, account growth, or competitive positioning is largely absent. When guidance is requested, responses are often indirect—questions are redirected back to the rep "what do you think you should do?", or they are encouraged to seek input from select peers. While peer collaboration can be valuable, it can at times feel like a substitute for clear, accountable leadership. Instead of observing and providing strategic feedback, the management style can feel reactive and unfocused. Attention is often directed toward minor or low-impact details—such as scrutinizing small gaps in a mileage log—while larger business priorities receive less attention. As a result, activity is high, but productivity is not. Team communication frequently includes high-level motivational messaging, but it is not always paired with actionable direction or consistent follow-through, which can make it difficult for reps to translate that energy into results. The result is that many field employees quietly spend more time managing their manager than they do receiving support from one. What makes the situation particularly frustrating is that this leader has worked closely with the same direct supervisor for many years. Because of that longstanding relationship, the behavior appears to go largely unchecked despite being a common topic of conversation among the team. Over time, multiple employees have either transferred to other teams or left the company altogether. When turnover consistently concentrates around the same leadership structure, it is usually worth asking why. Over time, the consistency of these concerns raises less of a question about individual performance and more of a question about leadership oversight and accountability. More broadly, there are also concerns around professionalism at certain company events, which can further erode confidence in leadership depending on the setting. It is also worth noting that these concerns are specific to the wound sales division, which operates differently from other areas of the company. Other specialties do not rely on a direct field sales force in the same way, and employees in corporate or non-sales roles may have a very different experience. If you work in most parts of the company, you may have a completely positive experience. However, candidates considering a role in the wound sales team in the Mid-Atlantic region should ask direct questions about leadership culture before accepting an offer. It may also be helpful to speak with several current team members to better understand the day-to-day experience.