Scammers - Senior Benefits Advisor bei OneDigital: Mitarbeiterbewertung

1,0
19. März 2025
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CEO-Befürwortung
Geschäftsprognose

Pros

There are no pros of working at this company.

Kontras

Everything. This company from upper management who are blatantly brainless when it comes to the pulse of any company. Middle managers who are glorified baby sitters who sit behind there desk making art projects and posting stats updates. Agents who are “trained” to read a script and manipulate 65+ year olds in to change their insurance plans. The outsourcing of leads from vendors in factory setting who don’t have a pulse on anything promising anything so they stay on the line for a minute. The company paying a base pay of $20/hour and bonus of sold plan on sliding scale. Not to mention they keep 95% of each plan when it effects and keep agents waiting 31 days before they’re paid there bonus. This company held a meeting and promised all these incentives to motivate people to stay at this company after 250+ employees have quit or been fired for various reasons. This company is a sinking ship anything that they promise you from phone screen, to interview, to the job is a lie. The indeed application is all false in what they promise. The employee benefits you’ll be chasing down for months, not to mention they’re not worth paying for. Overall, I don’t see this company in business in the next 6-12 months.

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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