MOBĒ Reviews

3.0

34% would recommend to a friend

(86 total reviews)

Mike Ott

30% approve of CEO

35% positive business outlook

MOBĒ has an employee rating of 3.0 out of 5 stars, based on 86 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The MOBĒ employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Personal consumer services industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

86 reviews
2.0
14 Apr 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great pay, some really great coworkers who are smart and very caring, good work/life balance, a shared mission of helping people become healthier and happier, really great concept for improving health without adding to the cost of health care

Cons

I used to love this job, but over the past year or so it has become very stressful. The company is moving more in the direction of an old medical model that does not work for behavior change. The clinical team doesn't seem to understand that this program is not the same, nor should it be, as a patient walking into a medical clinic. I frequently feel I have to choose between doing things the way I'm told to and doing what's best for my participants (the people I coach.) Many of the positive reviews here seem to come from directors or managers. It's great that they love their jobs, but almost all the reviews from the guides, who are the people who actually deliver MOBE's service, are negative. Almost all of the positive reviews list as a con that change is a fact of life at MOBE and if you can't deal with it, that's a con. This is a great example of leadership at MOBE blaming guides for not being able to deliver the constantly changing program with perfection. Change based on evidence and best practices, recommended by people with experience in the fields of behavior change and lifestyle medicine would be welcome. MOBE seems to change just to show they are doing something, and the changes often do not make sense and make it more difficult to do our jobs well. There is little transparency here. Recently, employees were evaluated on different parameters than what we were told we would be evaluated on, once it was too late to try to reach the different goals. The people who deliver the service are not part of creating the service, and feedback is elicited after changes are already made, when it's too late for the feedback to be actionable. The level of micromanaging is ridiculous. Most of the guides (coaches) are highly educated people with experience in various health fields, but we are treated as technicians who are expected to deliver a cookie cutter program into which we should be able to squeeze all of our participants. It doesn't work that way. Calls with participants are evaluated and points will be taken off for minor changes in wording that do not impact the value a participant gets from a call. There isn't much room for professional judgement. Even leadership evaluates calls to discuss how the program should be delivered. I have never worked for a company where the leadership micromanaged to this extent. They have enough work trying to run the company, and bring in some more business so that there will still be a company. There is a lot of talk about the amazing culture at MOBE, but this is a culture of toxic positivity. Even as we lost our biggest client, people were talking about what an exciting time this was for MOBE and what a great opportunity the company faced. This has created a culture where employees are afraid to speak their minds. This is not a company with a growth mindset!They don't want to hear constructive criticism. Morale is extremely low. Almost every guide I've spoken with is looking for another job.

2.0
1 Mar 2022

Willful ignorance and hubris at the top

Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Wonderful idea/mission and they hire really compassionate people. Unfortunately, terrible execution, a culture of toxic positivity (not actually interested in learning/innovation/utilizing evidence-based info).

Cons

As someone who has worked in the field of psychology and lifestyle medicine for decades, it was endlessly frustrating to work for a company run by people with seemingly zero experience in the field and even less interest in learning about what the research says about lifestyle-behavior change. MOBE needs to recognize its ignorance and quickly get up to speed in order to be competitive but constantly refuses to learn from those that understand the field and prioritizes fantastical opinions about how behavior change works rather than diving into anything remotely based on best practices. Most of the “philosophy” is from the clinical team run by people entrenched in an outdated medical model without any training in behavior change psychology or lifestyle medicine who genuinely believe that mansplaining that “sleep is good for you” and collecting metrics is the secret sauce that no one has ever thought of, despite decades of public health research pointing toward those techniques being ineffective and incomplete at best. If it were that easy, everyone would be in great shape after a primary care visit. It is laughable. The health guides, many of whom have real experience in the field, are forced to follow a poorly written script (calls are audited and “graded” by people without any professional experience in healthcare). This auditing process actively discourages guides from using their professional judgment, empathy, and meeting the participant's needs. If you work with a complex ppt who doesn’t perfectly conform to the program, the guide is seen as the problem. . Guides are scapegoated for the failings of the program Leadership needs to get real and address the root causes. Management psychology 101 would point towards extreme micromanagement not inspiring great performance. I’ve never worked in a healthcare setting that audits every word you say rather than relying on the professionals they hire to cater their approach to the unique needs of the participant. Again, from the HR team to the clinical team the tools they use are outdated and ignore decades worth of research about how to motivate the participants or inspire employees to have high performance and work satisfaction. Reading one Harvard Business Review article could be very enlightening to those in leadership. When engagement and retention are low due to a completely ridiculous program design, they blame the guides (many who actively have to suppress their impressive training in the field to stick to “the program”). How sad! Work for this company if you believe that collecting random data and metrics (in a completely clunky, labor-intensive manner) somehow creates a good user experience and magically leads to behavior change. If you know anything about the actual science and the field, do not work here! Your expertise and critical thinking skills will be seen as a negative and a threat to the leaders that are entrenched in nonsensical, non-science-based ideas about how this all works. They promote people who don’t think critically and are ignorant about the field and will simply take barking orders because they don’t realize how flawed it all is. A wearable would offer what this company is trying to replicate in a more effective manner. If you want a true coaching or behavior change experience that facilitates self-management in an innovative way based on real science YOU WILL HATE WORKING HERE. The saddest part is that the guides are very talented and understand how to inspire and support people and are never listened to at the company's peril. It seems logical you’d want to learn from those who are actually doing the work every day but again, nothing about this company is based on logic, science, or good design principles. It’s sad because the mission is fantastic but the execution is flawed. This is not a company that learns from its mistakes or admits when it's wrong. I don’t expect it will be around much longer.

2.0
22 Jan 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Genuinely important place in the realm of decreasing healthcare costs while improving actual health and quality of life, one person at a time. Pay is high for the health coach industry. The mission of the company attracts healthcare professionals who are frustrated by traditional healthcare systems which minimize the autonomy and potential of the individuals seeking care.

Cons

Managed by friends of the principle funder/owner, not necessarily based on their managerial experience or acumen. Management is dissociated from the health guides who deliver the actual program to coach individuals on lifestyle health self management. Guide/coach input and ideas on everyday delivery are not heard, or sometimes even tolerated. It is a company designed to have health care experts coach individuals on how to care for their own health. Management people have little or none of this experience, and do not respect input from the coaches who do. Lack of transparency and guidance by management as to what parameters/metrics a coach needs to adhere to in order to protect their employment. Management/business departments routinely fail to land clients, and when business gets low, guides/coaches, who outperform other companies in the marketplace get laid off.

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Glassdoor has 91 MOBĒ reviews submitted anonymously by MOBĒ employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if MOBĒ is right for you.