Bad management - Anonymous employee Abbott Employee Review

3.0
Jun 6, 2010
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The benifits are great, easy to get to, plenty of parking, cafe with decent food, and the few coworkers that care and will help.

Cons

Management likes the unwriting poilicy to punish the whole to treat the few. its happend way to much in my 3 years there. the install of time clocks for the few empolyes that were abusing system was way to drastic, as it was there managers fault for not enforcing there empolyes to follow the rules. and if the managers were signing off on a falsified time card, and the managers let it happen, its then not the empolyie who is wrong.

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5.0
Jun 3, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Work life balance is great

Cons

Remote work opportunities are minimal.

2.0
Jun 15, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

• Strong brand and market position • Talented individual contributors and subject matter experts sprinkled throughout the organization • Opportunity to work on products that impact many patients

Cons

These comments reflect experience within Abbott Diabetes Care. • Culture can feel political and risk-averse, with difficult issues often addressed indirectly rather than transparently • Decision-making is slowed by multiple layers of management, many of whom appear focused more on managing upward than enabling teams and execution • Long-tenured management structures can create limited accountability, discourage new ideas, and make modernization difficult • Some leadership styles feel hierarchical and dismissive of dissenting viewpoints, making it risky to challenge the status quo • Strategic thinking and decision authority are concentrated among a relatively small group of senior leaders, creating bottlenecks and limiting innovation • Office environments and ways of working often feel outdated compared to more modern organizations • Organizational responsiveness can be frustratingly low. Routine requests, decisions, and communications often require multiple follow-ups, creating unnecessary delays and reducing accountability • Promotions and performance assessments often lack transparency, leading employees to question whether advancement is based on impact, visibility, DEI, or internal relationships • Employees navigating significant career or life transitions may experience varying levels of support, visibility, and development opportunities, making career continuity and progression feel less predictable than they should be

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