Verizon reviews

3.6

60% would recommend to a friend

(35,745 total reviews)
avatar

Dan Schulman

24% approve of CEO

44% positive business outlook

Verizon has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 35,745 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Verizon employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Telecomunicaciones industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

36K reviews
3.0
Feb 12, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Overall, I would say that Verizon Wireless is a good company to work for considering the phenomenal benefits. They have many programs that are unheard of by other companies like backup child care, tuition assistance (NOT rembursement which requires you to pay up front and you don't have to stay with the company afterwards!), and even adoption assistance just to name a few. The pay is much better than what some outsiders would assume, the best in the industry in fact, but not as good as it used to be since they've changed the commission structure due to the economy change - but what company hasn't?!

Cons

1. Company sets IMPOSSIBLE goals for their employees. If you work in a high volume store like I do, then you'll quickly learn that the better your store does, the worst your paychecks will be. They repay your hard work and earning upper management HUGE bonuses by raising the sales goals so high that it is impossible to earn the larger sized checks you expect - unless you hop around to slower stores where you get a bigger paycheck for less work (Ridiculous!) 2. The Washington/Baltimore/Virginia region is extremely shady at times. This region works by its own more restrictive rules and if you don't know your rights, you will get screwed. The employee handbook should be your bible and dont be afraid to go to the main headquarters in NJ to get backup if necessary! Also, since there is no union, Verizon Wireless takes full advantage and have gotten away with doing illegal things like changing the attendance policy without notifying their employees as a means of power managing people out of positions. It's only a matter of time before a class action suit will be filed against them I'm sorry to say. 3. Promotions are based on who is friends with who and not necessarily who has earned it. Some people are managers who know absolutely NOTHING about the jobs of the people they manage. This makes it extremely frustrating when you rely on upper management for assistance and they are far less knowledgeable than you. Also, you will find that certain employees seem to get away with bloody murder and get special treatment or privileges just because they're chummy with upper management. This even filters down to decisions about who gets "power managed" out of the company. 4. Verizon made some bad decisions last year and its come back to bite them on the butt. While their compeitors were PROACTIVE to the economy (reducing price plans), Verizon chose to be REACTIVE, only restructuring unlimited and pre paid pricing after their revenue took a nose dive. So how do they REACT to slumping numbers? Not by going back to the drawing board to correct THEIR mistakes, but by giving their LOYAL employees the axe. Not only that, they go about it in a shady way (refer to #3). They even went as far as giving the unlucky few negative evaluations based on information that they cannot backup with any paperwork. For example, claiming that a customer service rep is not producing solid sales numbers when A) customer service reps were not responsibile for any type quota until they suddenly changed our job title & responsibilities without any notification prior to the evaluation B) there is no paperwork or documentation that can support this claim since customer service reps use one major house account to perform all transactions and not on an individual basis like a sales rep, and C) MANAGERS give undesireable transactions to customer service reps to avoid hurting sales reps numbers, thus damaging the house account numbers on which the evaluation was based. Good employees are now working twice as hard as their counterparts to save a job that is virtually impossible to save, not based on actual performance, but on who is friends with who so Verizon can save money on severance pay. In the meantime, we are expected to work our butts off for a company that will eventually tell us to bend over and take it (for a lack of a better expression).

1.0
Feb 12, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great pay and benefits are provided by Verizon. I can't speak for the whole company, but in the call center the pay is probably the best I have ever seen.

Cons

Unfortunately, the pay and benefits while great do not make Verizon a good place to work. They do not promote an environment that allows for people to be able to think for themselves. Verizon requires that you handle each call like a robot. Sales is all that matters, not a customers actual needs. In fact, in many cases I felt like we were encouraged to harass customers and force them into products and services that they didn't really want. Some of the methods used to sell products do not seem ethical to me. Customers thought they were calling into customer service but were actually getting sales. Our job was to pretend we care but only so long as we could get the customer to spend more money. It is really ashame as the products and services are the best in the industry, but the company is heartless and is only thinking about their bottom line. Representatives are constantly being let go for not forcing enough customers to buy unwanted products and services. Reps are not properly trained to handle all customer service issues, but then again that doesn't really matter in this job as the customers only matter if they add new services and spend more money. We were not supposed to care about their overall satisfaction.

2.0
Feb 12, 2010
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I do not have a degree and have been compensated VERY well over the past 5 years. Good benefits!

Cons

Sales reps compete with non-commission employees in the same store/kiosk AND are under tons of pressure from management.

Viewing 35305 - 35307 of 35,745 Reviews

Glassdoor has 38,086 Verizon reviews submitted anonymously by Verizon employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Verizon is right for you.