Amica Insurance reviews

3.9

74% would recommend to a friend

(1,021 total reviews)
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Edmund (Ted) Shallcross III

81% approve of CEO

74% positive business outlook

Amica Insurance has an employee rating of 3.9 out of 5 stars, based on 1,021 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Amica Insurance 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

1K reviews
3.0
May 28, 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Nice office, upgraded computers, anticipated phone upgrades, pays lip service a "good culture". Offers flexibility where it benefits the employer, such as offering entry level customer service representatives 37.5 hours as full time at $14/hr (27,300 base salary), which is the equivalent $13.13/hr at a 40/hr per week employer. To be completely honest, during my tenure employees were allowed to work over 37.5 hour minimum with pre-approval. Employees could also forego unpaid lunch breaks which further shortens the work day.

Cons

The culture "talk" is used to justify unfair management behavior. Like many places the management is ignorant or complicit when a leader abuses subordinates. A sycophant will be rewarded; independent thinkers and confident personalities will be targeted.

2.0
Dec 27, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The schedule was pretty good monday-friday 8 to 5 pm with a one hour lunch and two 15 min breaks. Weekends off and they have about 10 holidays off per year which is more than any company I have ever worked for before. Benefits were ok but health coverage was a bit on the high end for me (around $100 per month). They also have a wellness program that reimburses you for gym memberships but you have to wait until the end of the year to be reimbursed (and yes it is taxed). Pay was pretty good starting around 15/hour. You get 10 vacation days per year but cant use them until you have been working there at least 6 months. You also get 10 sick days per year but you are penalized on your performance reviews if the company feels you used more sick days than average based on your co-workers

Cons

Training is non-existent. You are expected to get your property and casualty license in around 1-2 months after you start there but there is no set training process to make sure new employees are engaged and feel like they are a part of the company. One of the managers basically goes over policies and procedures the first day with you and then gives you an insurance book to read on your own for the rest of the day. You are sent to a class for two days at an off site location where the instructer literally just reads from a book all day. After that you go back to the office you and you will go over some of their computer systems and do a 2 week web based class but you basically just sit in a cubicle and study on your own until you are ready to take the state exams. The office I was located at had a very conservative atmosphere (mostly older adults working there and all the managers were ladies). This isn't necessarily a bad thing but I personally enjoy more diverse atmospheres that are open to new ideas and perspectives. They have a very strict dress code, even on fridays which are supposed to be casual days.

1.0
Nov 14, 2022

Misguided Ideas

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Pricing of benefits for individuals, seriously that’s about it.

Cons

-No work life balance: to this day there are still old school upper/branch management that expect their management teams to stay working until late at night. The best part is I was told “you need to stay to get the job done” by a supervisor who since quit because she hated working so late. If you’re joining the FLP, the training department will tell you this job is 37.5 hours and your branch manager will straight up tell you that’s a lie. The second you get in the branch or you get promoted and drop associate, they will tell you to work 40-42 hours a week. -insult to account managers: our title was stripped from “Account Managers” to “Team Manager”. Your title is no different than someone who works on food service or is a shift manager. This is to reflect the fact that the role has evolved to two positions: micro management of reps, and Underwriter/Customer Service Manager (really 3 roles). Account managers have begged for years to be paid for 40 hours like other underwriters within the industry but to no avail. So you’ll have to login or arrive to work and miss out on 20 hours+ of pay because they didn’t care to treat you the way the industry pays. -Pay: I’ve since left but was told that management raised rep pay again but has a “8 month plan” to assess if underwriters are being paid their worth. Guys, go on Indeed and look at how much any insurance company is paying underwriters. Or even how many hours each week. No need to reinvent the wheel and spend market research on correct pay. They added a split level of pay I believe to the AM role, so now they can increase your pay to the same level as someone who is above your title and not give you the title. Like wise you can get promoted and not get a pay raise that you deserve. Honestly disgusting! -Shady Hiring: there’s hiring going on where people don’t have to relocate from their branch offices across the country. Imagine being the only recruiter who’s permanently remote. Or being the only person who doesn’t report to work until 1-3 hours after business starts. That’s not the problem, the problem is none of those roles posted allowing this! Many people would apply and stay at amica if you offered remote positions more. Why did these few get special treatment? Also, it’s worse when they pop up other members of the company and state “it’s because xxx loves me and knows I’m great enough to stay remote as a ops member”. Yeah, that’s really great work place culture! -Choosing brand over employees: I’m not mad that they chose to sponsor the arena for 10 years, I’m just mad that our $15 lunch 3 days a week was less important than buying the dunk for 1+million a year for 10 years. I’m mad that I was told it was “too expensive”. I’m mad that my friend was told her fill in duty had to be remote because “the JOs were concerned with travel cost”. Well that’s funny because my JO came earlier this year and got to choose their specific travel arrangements that included a hotel level above what were allowed to book as managers and nobody complained. What happened to that “national account manager” role? Or scs supe National role? Claims has done it I believe. -Micro Management: you are required to micro manage. There’s a program rolling out called “workforce” management that looks great on paper. But at the cost of employees. It controls everyone’s day to day. On a long call? Out of “Adherence”. Bladder problem? Out of adherence. Better get a doctors note. Have a walk-in? Out of adherence. Rep having a mental breakdown because of their professional/personal life? Guess what, out of adherence and you better tell home office/corporate how long you think that rep will be off the phone. And guess what, some people will be able to change it and some people can’t, but as a direct supervisor, you will never be able to go in and update their schedule. Ever. And it will have a negative effect on reviews. -Fake Reviews: my friend got an email and a discussion that encouraged positive feedback on review sites. Amica basically is getting promoted/fake reviews from new hires that haven’t left training or is only asking the most successful employees to post on this review site positively. -Cheating Customers: there’s a new rating system online that charges poor people more. No not the credit one. The one that says if you can only afford a cheaper car that has had prior owners or x amount of miles, amica will charge you more. CarVantage is the greatest scam ever and I ask all insureds to file a lawsuit on this for discriminatory practices as it disenfranchises poor communities where people may have decent credit but not enough wealth. Its public knowledge on the Texas Insurance website that Amica is continuing to grow it. If you want wealth, join more car clubs (yes amica has joined the BMW owners of America. The car that constantly gets totaled out and mostly north of 80k brand new…)

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Amica Insurance Response
3y
Thanks for taking the time to share your review with us. We value the feedback we receive from those that have worked for us. When it comes to comments about our rating system, please know that Amica does not engage in illegal rating practices, nor do we engage in discriminatory practices. You mention your concerns with the employee reviews on this site. We want to make it clear that we’re not asking our employees for positive reviews. When we ask our employees to review the company on Glassdoor, we’re looking for honest and open feedback about their specific experiences with the company. We acknowledge your frustration in a number of areas, and would like to speak with you further about your experience. Please email us at employeefeedback@amica.com so we can discuss this with you.
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