Thankful it's over! - Technical Support TP Employee Review

1.0
Jul 28, 2012
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- Give 2 weeks when you quit and you'll always have a job there. - Stick it out for a year and your experience looks good to prospective employers.

Cons

- Horribly underpaid for what you're expected to know. After completing 6 weeks of classroom training on tech support for phone, internet and cable, you will earn a meager $10.50 an hour. Even if you could afford the company's health insurance on that salary, it isn't worth having. - Low-class coworkers. Lots of people in sweatpants with poor hygiene and poor attitudes. Do NOT store your lunch in the communal refrigerators; there is a good chance someone will steal it. I saw a supervisor blow "snot rockets" into the trash can next to his desk more than once. My trainer belched out the word "barf" mid-sentence several times a day during training. These are NOT exaggerations! -The place is dirty. Toilets sprayed with feces or clogged are a daily occurrence. People don't pick up after themselves in the break room. The microwaves are full of slop, there are potholes in the parking lot, headsets are communal and covered with hairs and flaked skin, and so on. - "Supervisor" and "Internal Help Desk" personnel are terrible. They let tiny bits of power go right to their heads and are deliberately rude and anti-helpful. Eye-rolls and sighs precede the answer to just about any question you ask, probably because these "big promotions" only come with an extra $1 an hour. Most "company memos" are stated in the imperative and end with the phrase "up to and including termination." - If you work on Saturday or Sunday, forget about ever having that day off again. Forget PTO, they won't even approve UNPAID time off when it's requested months in advance. - "Net-staffing" is the company's practice of changing your schedule, whether or not you can work at those times. It means that, if you're scheduled on a holiday-pay holiday, you can be removed from that day and rescheduled on your day off. It also means they can (and do!) forcibly change daytime schedules to overnights. For example, you might be told that instead of noon to 8pm, your schedule is being changed to 1:30am to noon. These are permanent changes, not rotating. - You have an allotment of "break time" each day, which includes restroom breaks. So basically, that means there is a timer running each time you have to use the restroom. - There is a “clean desk policy” and they also reserve the right to conduct searches of your personal belongings. Having a pen, piece of paper (such as a receipt), a cell phone or an ipod in your purse or on your desk could result in discipline or termination. (Supervisors openly text and play games on their phones, look at facebook and sports scores on their computers, though they are subject to the same rules.)

Explore other reviews about TP

5.0
Jun 18, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

My group of supervisors and our manager work really well together. The upside of this company is the ability to work from home and the support you are given is better than most places I have worked.

Cons

this can only be said for my project as we do not always have a clear path of what the upper management is looking for us to do

3.0
Jun 16, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

For the most part, I have an open availability. I do however, like not having to work on Sundays. Some campains allow for a 1 hour lunch break. The hiring process was fairly easy. Your equipment is provided. There is opportunity for advancement. They are helpful when it comes to license renewal. Calls are back to back which for me seems to make time go faster. Flexibly as to when you want to take your lunch break. You have to opportunity to assist people without having to feel it was rushed. Off all major holidays.

Cons

Rushed training that may leave some questions unanswered. I feel like I had to figure things out on my own. Getting the assistance you need to help a client took longer than it should, especially when the client is on on hold, waiting for your response. At times some trainers seem to be unprepared for the roll they have taken. Calls are frequently monitored. Not much time between calls. It can take too long to transition from on campain to the next after the project has ended.

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