Predatory, Mismanaged and Unethical - Senior Benefit Advisor bei OneDigital: Mitarbeiterbewertung

1,0
19. Aug. 2024
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CEO-Befürwortung
Geschäftsprognose

Pros

There are no Pro's in terms of the actual work, the ONLY pro is that it can be a good place to network with coworkers and make friends.

Kontras

-The recruiters will manipulate you to get you to accept the position. They will pitch only the top end dollar amount you CAN make and tell you that you can help people at the same time. You can not. -Trainers will train you to manipulate the elderly clients into changing their insurance whether it benefits the client or not. They will teach you loopholes to skip important parts of the process. -Management (including upper management) is not only complicit in unethical business practices but promotes them, including fraudulent use of election periods to enroll clients in new plans. -The company makes it nearly impossible to leave for other job opportunities by withholding carrier appointments regardless of the length of time employed. -Management sleeping with new agents on numerous occasions. -Management will be on you at all times, bathroom breaks are timed, everything is timed down to the second. How long you are on calls or not, how long you are doing anything other than being on the phone. -Incessant micro managing bordering on harassment -Pay is far below industry standard

Mehr Bewertungen zu OneDigital entdecken

5,0
17. Juni 2026
Mitarbeiter (anonym)
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CEO-Befürwortung
Geschäftsprognose

Pros

Strong company culture focused on taking care of employees and clients. Excellent place to work, as long as you're willing to put in the time and effort.

Kontras

Not necessarily a con. Still a relatively young, and growing firm that is building out structure.

1,0
2. Juli 2026
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CEO-Befürwortung
Geschäftsprognose

Pros

The people you meet while working at OneDigital are genuinely great, and I’ve formed several lasting friendships during my time there.

Kontras

Employees are often treated as numbers rather than individuals, with performance measured by metrics that are frequently outside of their control. Upper management regularly sets or changes performance expectations without effectively communicating those changes to frontline agents, making it difficult to meet evolving standards. Employees are also closely monitored, including being timed when using the restroom. Arriving even one minute late can result in a write-up, while upper management is often able to arrive 5-10 minutes late without consequence. During peak seasons, employees are expected to work 10-hour shifts, six days a week. When business slows, the office closes for two weeks, leaving hourly employees without pay. While there is an opportunity to earn back some of that lost income by working additional hours during peak season, it is not guaranteed. Overall, there is a noticeable disconnect between upper management and the day-to-day realities of the job. Many decisions and expectations do not reflect the challenges employees face in the current market, leaving staff feeling unsupported and undervalued.

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