Thread regarding Cigna layoffs

What is toxic about working at Cigna?

Seeing a lot of negative sentiments about working at Cigna. I left the organization in 2022, and it was a fine place to work back then. Not perfect but I wouldn’t say it was toxic.

What’s changed that’s made Cigna so toxic to work at?


by
| 1324 views | | 9 replies (last ) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1kw5ka4f4

9 replies (most recent on top)

@dk I was part of the first round of VRP "offerings" in Sept 2025 after nearly two decades with the company. I made the right call because many of the people who turned it down wound up being laid off soon after. Since then I keep hearing about add'l VRPs and layoffs. The company is so shortsighted to let experience and expert knowledge walk out the door!

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @zs+1kw5ka4f4

@et how did I forget Katya... it was just a mess after the trios.
Man, Mark Boxer was one of the greatest leaders I've ever seen in this company, but hey good leaders don't last. I believe he was also a threat for DC so he fired him possibly.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @j2+1kw5ka4f4

If you left in 2022, you know the old company, not the new. The new enterprise does not have the same mission, vision, or values. It's fueled by fear, humiliation, and ambiguity. The best talent is gone, leaving behind only those who don't know any better and won't ask questions. People are not treated as people any longer - whether it be employees, customers, or partners. It's all a numbers game now.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @h3+1kw5ka4f4

@dk Blackrock wins from this. Their goal is to steal all our data for bad foreign actors. We all know who.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @f1+1kw5ka4f4

Constant threat of layoffs hanging over us.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @ez+1kw5ka4f4

@dk I remember when Mark Boxer and Gina Papush were leaders. Excellent leaders.

Then we got Noelle Eder, DP Koka, and Katya Andressen the real DEI hires.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @et+1kw5ka4f4

The company went down hill especially (for IT) after Noelle Eder who came from Hilton Hotels and became VP, the person before her Mark Boxer was a great leader who transformed the industry and made Cigna a tech lead in healthcare. She finally resigned and left it for DP who also came with her from Hilton. During this time they worked behind to offshore all the IT roles to India and mimic a failed strategy by Anthem BCBC by creating a tech hub center in Hyderabad, India. They created HIH ( Hyderabad Innovation Center) (they're trying to rename it now because of it's negative association) - From this point onwards, it was all celebration by the exec team, which ended up with their resignation and thousands of layoffs after layoff's, forced VRP of high-value long-term employees. If you're the one left over, how do you feel after seeing all this? Who really benefits from HIH? what is their goal?

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @dk+1kw5ka4f4

It used to be a culture of caring for the employees. Now it is a culture of caring for the shareholders at the employees expense.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @c8+1kw5ka4f4

@OP I would say it went especially downhill after the election in 2024 and reached peak toxicity the last half of 2025 and up to the layoffs.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @at+1kw5ka4f4

They laid off 2,000 people in February and no longer value their employees

Cigna is rumored to have another large wave of terminations this year if the share price isn’t higher

Cigna is going all in for offshoring as many US positions as possible to India

Cigna only cares about its stock price and is willing to terminate loyal employees to temp prop up the share price for a band aid approach to bad leadership decisions

Cigna thinks AI is going to save them money while terminating people who are qualified to perform the role

Wait for the cost of AI investments to not RIO and then Cigna will have no one left to save the ETL it’s not what it used to be

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @aj+1kw5ka4f4

Post a reply

: