Consumer Cellular reviews

3.6

69% would recommend to a friend

(809 total reviews)

Ed Evans

71% approve of CEO

68% positive business outlook

Consumer Cellular has an employee rating of 3.6 out of 5 stars, based on 809 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Consumer Cellular employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Telecommunications industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

809 reviews
1.0
Dec 21, 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

They will hire anyone. There are no other pros and that's not even a pro.

Cons

From the bottom of my heart, I beg you not to work here. It will only cause you misery and pain. The worst job I've ever had. They don't pay industry standards but expect you to have perfect stats. If you mess up even a tiny bit they will put you on a warning and don't coach you on how to improve. Management absolutely favors certain people and if you don't fit into that clique you never will. If you question the supervisors they will find any reason to get rid of you. The owners like to pretend that they are oblivious to the treatment of the employees but they know exactly what is going on. Please listen to all of other reviews as well and take them to heart. I wouldn't even give them one star.

1.0
Dec 26, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Back in 2020, the pros of this company were great culture, supportive managment, and room for professional growth. Now none of those things are true, ever since Ed Evans and Adam Davids took over the company at C-Level. This company was only good to work at when John & Greg were the owners, as they actually cared about the employees and not just about increasing numbers and revenue.

Cons

The wages are below industry standards for existing employees, but as for external hires, they make upwards of 10k/year more than established employees. Then, the established employees are tasked with training their new "peers". There's a blatant disregard for fair compensation, and attempts at negotiation are met with resistance. Leadership; Paul McIntosh (Site Director) exhibits emotinal & erratic behavior, and irrational explosions are not uncommon. This not only creates a stressful work environment, but managers and supervisors walk on egg shells around Paul. We were also told to keep some issues secret from him to avoid his emotional reactions. There is very little recognition for successes, but mistakes are addressed with extreme measures, due to Paul's lack of emotional intelligence and control. The company culture promotes competition over collaboration, leading to an extremely toxic work environment. This causes endless gossip and drama, especially in the leadership side. Everyone talks about others and will throw eachother under the bus when it comes down to it. Along with that, the constant pressure from managers to drive up the KPIs causes extreme stress, and supervisors are known to cheat by padding their stats to reach the top of the ranking system, only to get minimal recognition and no stipend, bonus, or even a pat on the back. HR is meant to be a resource for employees; at CCI it's an extension of the problem, rather than a solution. HR Managers, especially Nichole Halloran and Pamela Piper, will share "confidential" information with other employees, often working against employees to deliberately get them fired if they dont "like" them. Issues raised are met with indifference or swept under the rug, and HR Management will pressure people to not speak out about the disgusting and illegal things some of the supervisors and managers are doing by using the job as leverage. In conclusion, my time at Consumer Cellular has been marked by disappointment and frustration. I was mentally and emotionally throlled daily. I would strongly advise prospective employees to carefully consider the potential challenges before committing to a role here. The issues with unfair wages, emotionally immature and explosive management, corrupt HR, toxic culture, and favoritism collectively create an unhealthy work environment that can severely impact your professional and personal well-being.

2.0
Feb 18, 2020

Empathy for Customers NOT Employees

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

CAA 1 can quickly become a CAA3 in less than 3 months. Health insurance for employee is Free...but must pay for additional members of family. Meet everyday for a 5/15 minute team meeting.

Cons

Consumer Cellular wants every representative to bend over backwards for the customer, but Consumer Cellular does not bend a little for their employees. CONSUMER CELLULAR LACKS EMPATHY/COMPASSION/UNDERSTANDING and is NOT TRANSPARENT about the true employee experience. The VOC (“Voice Of the Customer”) survey is UNFAIR to EVERY REPRESENTATIVE.. You WILL lose your job for 3 survey months of customers not liking you or the person before you or after you. Even better, the customer does not like Consumer Cellular. Yes, cancelled customers receive surveys. Customers complaining about the call quality, wait times, Target representatives, CC Go app, and that awful DORO 7050...just to name a few. This includes customers that were not customers, but just asked questions, potential customers. Yes, they can receive a survey and you will have to deal with it. The survey requires a 7.75 as the lowest acceptable score (based on your paygrade). That is fair. Correct? NO. The grading scale is 0, 1, 3, 7, 10, but customers do not know that. If a customer answers the service was good that is a 7, so a customer may give you all 7’s. OOPS, you failed that VOC. That is okay, bc you can get 10’s. Correct? Yes, but if you received only 10 surveys then your odds are harder to improve the score. The survey is sent via email and a lot of Consumer Cellular customers do not know what an email is. Let alone, how to use an email. So, what is wrong with giving a survey at the end of the call? Or let representatives ask the customer if they received a GREAT customer service as well as let the customer know a survey may be received and to remember this experience. NOPE. You cannot mention a survey or the possibility of the survey or you will FAIL that call monitor (you can only fail 2/month). Also, you will be amazed how many customers will give the representative all 0’s but answer with a 10 for recommending Consumer Cellular. What is wrong with that survey? If that representative provided such an awful customer service experience, why would you recommend Consumer Cellular? Ask yourself, this question. You go to a restaurant and the service is bad, the chef did not know how to cook your food, the bathroom was filthy so you asked for a refund and the manager says, no. Will you give that restaurant a recommendation? Better, let’s throw that survey out. Impossible, every survey is yours and no accomodations are made to overcome skewed/unreasonable survey scores. The worst of it all, representatives are told they just aren’t good enough bc there are other representatives getting high VOC scores. That is comparing apples to oranges. Remember earlier the 10 VOC scores that were below 7.75. The average representative that receives high VOC scores consistently works a ton of overtime so they can cover up the low scores and meet their minimum requirement for VOC (based on their paygrade). Everyone cannot work overtime and eventually, it does burn you out. Due to the stress of the VOC, the customers yelling at you and being at CONSUMER CELLULAR from sunrise to sunset. Eventually, overtime is a burden vs an asset. If you need time off and you do not have PTO, regardless of the reason, you WILL incur an occurrence. You are allowed 3 w/n a 90 day period, which may seem reasonable at first glance. However, life events are not taken into consideration. Let’s say you had 2.5 occurrences in 90 days due to leaving work early for a sick child, an accident on the way to work that caused a 2 hour delay and you went outside to start your car, but it was stolen. Documentation WILL not save you from receiving an occurrence, unless you have STO. Unfortunately, you receive very little STO and PTO for the 1st year. Telling the truth does not save your occurrence, but you are expected to use STO only for sickness. So, if you say you were sick and you were not you can receive an occurrence. That is harder to prove, but if you tell your supervisor/co-worker that you weren’t sick--you will get an occurrence. If you have perfect attendance and unforeseen events take place, you will receive an occurrence and FIRED if you receive more than 3 w/n a 90 day period. So, what you have perfect attendance, meet and exceed all metrics and you are on the ELITE team...BYE BYE--FIRED. Occurrences carry MAJOR weight, but you must also keep track of the days. The days and occurrences are still counted against you for 12 months. Life must stay on pause and NOTHING can take place that requires a day off or you will be FIRED. Lastly, keep track of your STO and PTO. If for any reason, a mistake was made in calculating your time...TOO BAD. YOU ARE FIRED. There is no communication to the representatives about advancing. They must rely on their supervisor to relay that information. So, if your supervisor is not diligent or does not care then you will not know you were promoted. So, keep track of your metrics and understand how promotions from CAA1 - CAA3 are awarded. Be careful, that VOC increases with each promotion, so don’t chase the promotion. Unless, you are ready for the dreaded increase of the VOC. Representatives have lost their jobs for failing the VOC shortly after making promotion. Yes, if you fail VOC 4 times in a 12 month period -- YOU ARE FIRED. Regardless of improvement and making promotion. Earlier, I mentioned 3 months, but that is in a row. So, if you failed in Jan, Mar, July and December--BYE BYE you are fired. It does not matter that the customer did not understand the questions, you did not speak to that customer (call back that did not answer) or the customer clearly states you did a great job, but they are disappointed in Consumer Cellular. YOU ARE FIRED. Upper management is a click and once you make Sr. Sup or higher...YOU ARE GOLDEN. So, if you hang in there and you make it through the obstacles, you TOO can be GOLDEN. As long as you have the time, patience, and wherewithal to overlook hypocrisy, lack of clarity, scheduled life events, and watching your co-workers get FIRED consistently then you should apply to Consumer Cellular, but heed my last word of advise... KEEP YOUR RESUME UPDATED AND DON’T STOP LOOKING FOR NEW OPPORTUNITIES.

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Glassdoor has 829 Consumer Cellular reviews submitted anonymously by Consumer Cellular employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Consumer Cellular is right for you.