Great for recruiters who care more about money than others' well-being - Recruiter Maxim Healthcare Employee Review

2.0
25 Mar 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Decent salary (approx. $45k a year) - You can get promoted quickly, but that's mostly out of necessity and not merit. In other words, you end up with a lot of unqualified managers.

Cons

- You have to take on-call several times a month, which means receiving phone calls at all hours of the night about people who don't show up to their shifts. And you're still expected to be fully productive the next day. - It's a glorified telemarketing job. You spend a significant amount of time cold-calling and messaging people and hoping that they'll respond or not hang up on you. - They treat their nurse and nurse aid staff like crap. - Are stingy with how they pay their nurses and nurse aids. - You work in an open office with no privacy. - You get a half-hour break during a 9-hour work day.

Explore other reviews about Maxim Healthcare

5.0
30 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Flexible schedule, great office staff, great patients and families

Cons

Health insurance is a little expensive and there's limited options

5.0
15 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

1. Stable healthcare company with established reputation * Maxim Healthcare Services is well-known in healthcare staffing and home healthcare, so there is job security and established systems. 2. Strong administrative/coordinator experience * Great resume builder for future roles in operations, healthcare administration, recruiting, account management, or project coordination. 3. Relationship-building role * You work closely with families, caregivers, nurses, and clients, which builds strong customer service and communication skills. 4. Mission-driven work * You are helping coordinate care for families who genuinely need support, which can feel meaningful. 5. Potential growth opportunities * Can move into recruiting, branch leadership, healthcare operations, account management, or regional leadership. 6. Structured office environment * Predictable tasks, processes, scheduling, documentation, client communication. 7. Benefits and corporate structure * Usually offers PTO, healthcare benefits, 401(k), and more stability than smaller companies.

Cons

1. High stress / constant urgency * Healthcare staffing often means call-outs, last-minute schedule changes, unhappy families, and scrambling to fill shifts. 2. Heavy phone and email volume * Much of the day can be reactive rather than proactive. 3. Limited flexibility * Often requires strict office hours (commonly 8–5), which can be hard when balancing kids and school pickup schedules. 4. Emotional burnout * Working with patients, families, and caregivers can become emotionally draining over time. 5. Staffing shortages = pressure * If nurses/caregivers call off, coordinators are often responsible for solving the issue immediately. 6. Can feel repetitive * Scheduling, documentation, follow-up calls, and compliance tasks can become routine. 7. Compensation may not match stress level * Depending on market/location, pay can sometimes feel low compared with workload.

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