I came to TimelyCare because I believed deeply in the mission — expanding access to mental health care for college students. It was inspiring to think I could help make that happen. But what I walked into, and what the company has become, is something entirely different: a place where chaos, ego, and short-term thinking have replaced collaboration, trust, and purpose.
TimelyCare’s leadership culture is built around appeasing the CEO. Most of the executive team specifically — the CEO, CMO, and CRO — operate as a collective echo chamber, rarely questioning decisions and instead reinforcing whatever direction the CEO chooses that week. This “yes-man” environment has created instability and confusion throughout the organization.
Priorities shift constantly, often with no rationale beyond a whim or external pressure from private equity owners. One day we’re focused on student well-being, the next it’s revenue at all costs, then back to chasing a new “pivot.” Teams are left scrambling to reorient, while months of thoughtful work are discarded. It’s not leadership — it’s reactionary management driven by vanity and insecurity.
For a company built around mental health, the irony is painful. The internal culture is toxic, demoralizing, and unsustainable. The company’s stated values — compassion, integrity, teamwork — are rarely reflected in how people are treated. Speaking up, disagreeing, or offering a professional opinion that challenges leadership’s narrative is career suicide. People learn quickly that silence is safer than honesty.
It’s heartbreaking to watch good, mission-driven people burn out or leave. Therapists have shared stories of not having enough time to take a bathroom break between sessions, and they’re penalized when students reschedule or cancel appointments. The message is clear: the company’s productivity metrics matter more than the well-being of the providers who keep it running.
On the corporate side, employees live in a state of constant reorganization and fear. Roles change overnight with no communication or reasoning. Entire teams are restructured because leadership decided to “pivot” again. It’s chaos, pure and simple — and it’s become the norm.
Morale is understandably low. Transparency is nonexistent. Even routine communications from the CEO feel detached and impersonal, often reading like they were generated by AI or written by someone else entirely. There’s no authenticity, no empathy — just a stream of buzzwords and self-congratulation that ignore the reality employees live every day.
What makes this so disappointing is that the mission itself should matter. Students deserve access to quality care, and the providers and staff at TimelyCare genuinely care about that. But when profit and investor satisfaction take precedence over care, the result is predictable: declining service quality, overworked staff, and a culture that rewards compliance over competence.
Recent strategic shifts have been disastrous — leadership chased ideas that ignored data, dismissed expert advice, and alienated clients. It’s no surprise that the latest initiative has produced zero meaningful results. When decisions are made to protect egos rather than serve students, failure becomes inevitable. If you’re considering working at TimelyCare because of the mission — I understand. I felt that same hope. But you should know that the company you’ll join today is not the one that was built around student well-being and compassion. It’s a company driven by vanity metrics, private equity expectations, and a CEO surrounded by people too afraid to tell him the truth.
This is not a psychologically safe workplace. It’s not a place that values experience or expertise. And for a mental health company, that’s an especially bitter irony.
I know this review will get the standard “Thank you for your feedback, we’re sorry to hear this doesn’t reflect your experience…” response — likely written by ChatGPT or copied from a template. Please don’t. Nothing about the experience employees are having today is reflected in those hollow, PR-scripted replies. The best way to prove this review wrong would be to actually listen to your people.
Until that happens, TimelyCare will continue to lose good talent, good clients, and the trust of the very people it claims to serve.