
Patient Access Programs Operations Specialist
What is with all the "Poorly-edited job description requires attention to detail" winners lately?
What is with all the "Poorly-edited job description requires attention to detail" winners lately?
After the first two poorly-edited job descriptions, it's just funny now.
Y'all, the Company Careers page BINGOed before I even got to the job description, which actually looks fairly normal (if only available on LinkedIn). Not that I think y'all are doing this, but if anyone is, this is a really good example of why you can't just apply to a role based off a job listing.
They repeat "dynamic environment" a lot. There are several other Success and Support roles open and the ones I've seen are pretty fair compensation-wise, so worth a look if working in a "fast moving dynamic environment" doesn't phase you.
This seems intentionally worded to be confusing: "Exceptional 401k Match: We've got your financial future covered. Enjoy an 80% match of the first 10% deferral."
This is a critical role within the Engineering organization leading and scaling our Support Engineering team. You will own and drive Tecton’s customer-facing support efforts to the next level to provide a phenomenal user experience.Â
This job was mostly fine until we got to the "We're ideally seeking" section and then it was just downhill from there.
The application requires you to create an account with Dayforce, which seems like an even more corporate Workday, which I honestly didn't think was possible.
This is another wide salary range, but seeing as they're open to folks who are newer as managers, I actually think it's a good thing.
I've gotten multiple reports of this being a shady company with especially shady hiring practices. It also appears the Department of Labor is investigating them over unpaid overtime hours for its contractors.
Basically a can of Chock Full O' Nopes.
Suspiciously wide salary range.
A bilingual candidate with a bachelor's degree in computer science and technical expertise in cloud applications, mobile computing, and hardware device troubleshooting should not be making $35,403 to $59,500. I mean, come the fuck on.
I think maybe I drank a really bad batch of coffee because nothing makes sense anymore.
Still no mention of benefits, still probably only offering $65k for an on-site non-entry level role in NYC.
That's a suspiciously wide salary range. Also, the "ensure 100% client retention with high client satisfaction (9/10+ NPS scores)" made me do a double-take.
The salary range is great, if not really wide. My biggest concern is they're asking for 12+ years of experience in managing online communities, which could be fine if they count non-work experience.