Allstate reviews

3.5

55% would recommend to a friend

(11,232 total reviews)
avatar

Thomas J. Wilson II

64% approve of CEO

54% positive business outlook

Allstate has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 11,232 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Allstate employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Insurance industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

11K reviews
1.0
Sep 30, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Allstate is a large company with opportunities all over the United States. As an agent we are not employees but business owners with an exclusive contract to sell Allstate Products. This allows some lattitude in how one does marketing and organizes office staff. There is certainly the possibility of making very good money as soon as 6 to 8 years out because you receive commission when you sell the policy and every time it renews. The residiual income allows you to grow, hire staff, and increase your own salary. Allstate agents also have the right to sell their business (and their residual income stream) to an Allstate qualified buyer. Allstate will buy the book back at 1.5 times the annual commission, but agencies typically sell at around 2 times the annual commission to qualified buyers.

Cons

The contract that you sign with Allstate is completely onesided. Basically, they have no commitments to you, but they can take everything or change anything (including your commission rate) at any time with 30 days notice. This is exactly what they did to their agents in Canada: the took all the business back by cancelling all Candian agent contracts. They then had the gall to offer agents (some of whom where making over 500,000 a year) an entry level sales and service job with no residual income. They have also used this onesided arrangement to push more and more financial responsibility on agents without increasing commissions. Allstate once paid for office space, computers, paper, phones, tech support, office furniture, and some nice events for agents to mingle with management. All of those things are now paid for by the agent, making a small (start up) agency's profit margin slim at best. There are even more devious ways that they shift financial responsibility: the have reduced the number of underwriters available for agents to ask questions and get underwriting decisions from. The result is lower corporate costs and 30 minute hold times to speak to an underwriter. Also, while agents can sell their stream of income when they want to retire or move on, Allstate can be extremely picky and often arbitrary about who it will allow to buy agencies and where the office can be moved to. This creates a highly volatile price for agents who depend on the ability to sell one of their largest assets. Because agents are private contractors, there is basically no chance of moving into corporate management. Which is okay if you like running a small business, but doesn't offer a "career track". While there is certainly the opportunity to make great money, the rate at which you can sell policies is determined largely by the rate for your product. Allstate has a habit of increasing rates when it wants to limit exposure leaving agents to sit on their hands or work harder and spend more money marketing for ever lower returns. As far as coporate management itself. The are largely incompetent and political. They put policies in place that make no practical sense. Ease of doing business with Allstate as and agent and as a customer is one of its biggest failures. Finding someone who can actually answer your question or that has the authority to act is always frustrating and sometimes impossible. There are actually entire departments for which phone numbers are not available to agents. The agents' direct corporate liasons are usually so powerless and ill-informed that one questions what they actually do beside provide a buffer between agents and corporate. It also seems as though agents are deliberately kept in the dark about how the claims department handles claims and how provisions in the policy actually playout in a loss. It makes it very hard to advise clients who have specific questions about coverage.

2.0
Sep 28, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great benefits and the people you work with on your own level are awesome. Some of the managers are cool too.

Cons

Recognitions sucks, favoritism or the scare of favoritism has just taken away advantages from some individuals and put it on others, or at least until someone complains about them, then it will just go to another group of individuals. I guess they think if you do it until someone complains it isn't favoritism huh? The pay sucks, but the benefits keep us there. Plus management doesn't know what the hell they are doing.

1.0
Sep 25, 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

It's better then unemployment- or that's what I used to think, at least. Working at Allstate is all about nodding and smiling and not rocking the boat. If you have a high tolerance for idiocy, then this is the job for you.

Cons

Senior management has no clue as to what is going on. Allstate is the epitome of cronyism. Advancement isn't decided by merit, rather by who you know. The technology is outdated and the servers are always going down. They blame it on the State's DMV, when in reality it is actually their server that is done. They have unrealistic expectations and when something uncontrollable goes wrong, the blame squarely falls on your shoulders- rather then recognizing the situation for what it is, and congratulating a DSP for actually using common sense.

Viewing 11197 - 11199 of 11,232 Reviews

Glassdoor has 11,872 Allstate reviews submitted anonymously by Allstate employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Allstate is right for you.