Allied Universal reviews

3.1

46% would recommend to a friend

(13,277 total reviews)
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Steve Jones

46% approve of CEO

37% positive business outlook

Allied Universal has an employee rating of 3.1 out of 5 stars, based on 13,277 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Allied Universal employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Administración y consultoría industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

13K reviews
1.0
May 11, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

None whatsoever. Run, don't do it

Cons

I left Allied Universal 8 months ago and was reluctant to make a negative review. With AUS being the third-largest private company in the world, I assumed that maybe I just ended up on a bad account, and other accounts treated their employees better. But after reading a recent TIME Magazine article about the company, I realize that this is not the case, and jobseekers deserve to know what to expect. I started working for Allied Universal in 2019 as a flex officer in a SOC for a large bank. During my interview process, the account manager offered me two options: work 2nd shift with Tuesdays and Wednesdays off for $14.00/hour, or be on-call for an extra $0.50/hour and the possibility of getting paid 40 hours for a 16-24 hour work week (based on need for on-call availability). I accepted the flex officer position, and it quickly became one of my biggest professional regrets. Within less than a month of completing training, I was immediately severely overworked. I was forced to work 13 straight days on rotating shifts. I would work 3 PM-11 PM Monday, 7 AM-3 PM Tuesday, come back at 11 PM that night and work until 7 AM Wednesday morning, then work 7 AM-7 PM the next 2 days in a row, and so on. It got to a point where I had to take a week off (unpaid) due to mental health concerns because I was so overworked. My supervisors thought I had already quit, and admitted to me that they wouldn't have blamed me. After 6 months on-call, I was given the opportunity to select a permanent shift. I chose 2nd shift, mostly because someone had just been fired and their days off were Friday and Saturday, and I wanted that shift because I knew it would be the closest thing to a weekend I would get for a while. This also quickly proved itself to be a mistake. The bank I worked for had a cafeteria where real, decent food was prepared daily. 1st shift got to enjoy this benefit. Sadly, 2nd shift did not, because the cafeteria closed at 2 PM. Now this part is more the bank's fault than Allied Universal's fault. But we would repeatedly ask for tiny incentives to raise morale, such as $5 food vouchers for the vending machines/snack area. This was constantly ignored. It wasn't long before morale sank even lower. Around the same time that I switched to a permanent position, account contract renegotiations opened. At the end of renegotiations, we lost the following benefits: tuition reimbursement, paid time off, and good healthcare. When I began, healthcare was 100% covered, and the plans were good. After these renegotiations, healthcare was 80% covered, and the plans were supplemental, to the point that an urgent care check up cost $200. The consolation prize? a $3/hour raise and 3 total paid sick days per year. Things continued to spiral from there. Turnover was so unbelievably high that we'd bring on 5 new hires and lose 4 of them within less than 2 months. Concerns about fraternization and favoritism arose as attractive young women skyrocketed through the ranks while seasoned veterans remained stagnant. Promotions for unqualified officers led to power trips and verbal altercations. Call-outs were at an all-time high and no one wanted to come in for overtime, so officers were left with unscheduled 16 hour shifts and expected to come back in 8 hours later for their next shift. Morale and culture continued to sink to subterranean levels. Then comes COVID. Our entire job was done virtually, monitoring cameras, answering calls and disarming alarms. When every single employee from the bank started working from home, as did our Allied Universal managers and admins, we were forced to continue working in office, full-time. Nearly 3 months into the pandemic, our managers were still debating about whether masks LOOKED professional enough, rather than caring about our safety. They installed PVC and plexiglass shields between workstations, and that was it. We were left to fend for ourselves, no hazard pay, nothing at all. A couple of years in, I had been promoted to 2nd shift supervisor. This came with a $1/hour raise, and lifted me from $19/hour to $20/hour. Shortly after, the starting rate for base level console operators rose to $19/hour. This means that I had been an employee for nearly 3 years, had 3 "promotions" and multiple "raises" (the annual raise was $0.25/hour), and was making $1/hour more than the people I was training. When I asked for more money, my boss looked me in the eyes and said: "if you don't like it, you can look for a job elsewhere." So I did. Towards the end of my time at Allied Universal, I was promoted to a new position they created just to get me out of the way for more supervisors to be trained up, and to reduce how much negativity I was able to spread to newer officers (and I did, I warned trainees about what they would have to encounter and how things used to be, but can you blame me?) The new post was pointless, and came with a $0.40/hour raise. Although I was no longer a console operator or a supervisor, I was required to continue wearing the same uniform (but the attractive young woman one cubicle away from me got a new uniform, shocking right?) When I gave my 2 weeks notice, my boss told me he would pay me out my unused sick days on my final paycheck. 8 months later, I still haven't seen that money, and I never will. That's pretty much my breakdown of my 3+ years at Allied Universal. A tale of favoritism, morale-breaking incompetency, absolute apathy from management (not to mention blatant racism, ageism, and fraternization), and a complete lack of morals. I am sure there are some good accounts out there that treat their officers with dignity, respect, and encouragement. But between personal experiences and knowledge gained from reading other peoples' experiences, I warn each of you reading this to stay as far away as possible.

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Allied Universal Response
3y
We are sorry you had this experience. We wish you all the best in your future endeavors and please know this will be shared with the management team in order to improve.
2.0
Jun 19, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

All the hours you can work. Lots of overtime, because Allied likes to run their sites with a skeleton crew to save money. This was not a covid survival strategy. This is just how they rolled. And because security is needed on-site at all times to fulfill their contract, they will make their lapse feel like your responsibility. Lots of time to study at the desk and prepare for your next career/job.

Cons

Everything else. You will be treated like a low-skill worker, and they will educate you just enough to slot you into a chair overseeing cameras to satisfy another company's insurer. You will be treated like a high-schooler at their first job, although they're asking you to do serious work with serious consequences. You will be treated like meat in a seat, and if you're unlucky enough to be in a city where the HR office is overwhelmed, you will have to fight (for months) for the vacation hours you're owed, for site transfers, or for basic needs. Also, their site supervisors are practically given autonomy over their fiefdom. So if you're unlucky enough to get a supervisor who steals time from you, start keeping records in case you need to hold them accountable to the head office (when they finally answer their phone).

avatar
Allied Universal Response
3y
We are sorry you had this experience. We will be sharing this feedback with our management teams in order to improve.
2.0
May 10, 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Crash course in operations of a book of business, able to leverage this experience for better paying positions and knowledge to operate businesses A few months of operations management experience with will set the employee up for much better future opportunities. If one were to view this job as a low paying apprenticeship, there truly is something great to be obtained from this experience and I'm grateful for the opportunity to learn what I've learned. Your experience here will rest entirely on your direct line of managers. There were lots of people in the office who were great people. Ex-cops, military guys, security guys, lots of down to earth guys who understand what it's like to be out in the field. Senior Management seemed like real people. The GM and VP were easy to talk to and provided guidance and assistance. AUS has zero diversity issues. I would routinely hire women, LGBTQ+, minority and other protected classes.

Cons

Your experience here will rest entirely on your direct line of managers. Have managers that have never worked in a uniform in their life but expect officers to leave their children at home alone in the snow in order to show up for their shift? Interview your managers during the interview. The salary is insultingly low for the amount of responsibility. My book of business operated $8mm a year. Increasing profit a week by yearly salary only to be told it's not good enough is extremely bad faith. Bonus structure has diminishing returns and doesn't even compensate for the starting salary should be anyway. Schedule is "8-5" but there was never a day where I was done at 5, EVER. The reality is you are on call 24/7. Calls at 3 am are extremely normal due to the 4 hour call out rule and first shift starts at 7am. Expect calls when all shifts start, 7am, 3pm, 11pm and 4 hours before when all shifts start, 3am, 7pm, 11 am. 100 hour weeks are common. Management has a rule where you must return a superior's phone call within 2 hours. I've received calls at 2 am from managers, when do you sleep? The question to ask on the job is not what you are making here but what are you becoming here. Not many AOP like their answer to that question. Some jobs don't pay enough and cost too much.

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